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Parental influence on sexual intentions of Black adolescent girls: Examining the role of gendered-racial socialization.

Reina Evans-Paulson, McKenzie N. Stokes, Elan C. Hope, Laura Widman, Qiana R. Cryer‐Coupet

2021Journal of Family Psychology16 citationsDOI

Abstract

= 15.4) and their parents (87.8% female), we examine how two dimensions of gendered-racial socialization (gendered-racial pride socialization; gendered-racial oppression socialization): (a) are related to adolescents' intentions to have early sex and (b) moderate the association of parental communication and monitoring with adolescents' intentions to have early sex. We found Black girls who are exposed to more empowering messages about Black girls and women are less likely to intend to have early sex. Additionally, gendered-racial pride socialization moderated the relationship between parental monitoring and intentions to have sex, such that more monitoring was associated with lower intentions to have early sex among girls low in gendered-racial pride socialization. For girls high in gendered-racial pride socialization, there was no relationship between parental monitoring and sexual intentions. Gendered-racial pride socialization is an important asset in Black families, which can be leveraged to improve the sexual health of Black girls. Future studies are needed to examine the causal, temporal pathways between gendered-racial socialization and sexual health. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

PrideSocializationPsychologyDevelopmental psychologySocial psychologyPolitical scienceLawAdolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health