The Relations of Parental Autonomy Support to Cultural Internalization and Well-Being of Immigrants and Sojourners

Previous research has demonstrated that autonomy support is one particularly effective means of promoting internalization and fostering well-being. The present study sought to determine if this would also be the case with regards to culture by testing the relation of perceived parental autonomy supp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cultural diversity & ethnic minority psychology 2007-07, Vol.13 (3), p.241-249
Hauptverfasser: Downie, Michelle, Chua, Sook Ning, Koestner, Richard, Barrios, Maria-Fernanda, Rip, Blanka, M'Birkou, Sawsan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Previous research has demonstrated that autonomy support is one particularly effective means of promoting internalization and fostering well-being. The present study sought to determine if this would also be the case with regards to culture by testing the relation of perceived parental autonomy support to the cultural internalization and well-being of multicultural students. In Study 1, 105 multicultural participants living in Canada were more likely to have fully internalized their host and heritage cultures and to have higher self-reported well-being when they reported that their parents were autonomy supportive. In Study 2, 125 Chinese-Malaysians sojourners were also more likely to have fully internalized their heritage culture and indicated higher well-being when they perceived their parents as autonomy supportive. In both studies, heritage cultural internalization was also associated with higher well-being.
ISSN:1099-9809
1939-0106
DOI:10.1037/1099-9809.13.3.241