Abstract

Despite existing evidence on negative associations between parental autonomy support and children’s internalizing and externalizing problem behavior, it is difficult to draw conclusions on the effect that parents’ autonomy support has on children’s problem behavior. This study contributed to the existing literature by unraveling the temporal ordering of parental autonomy support and adolescent problem behavior. In addition, this study examined whether these linkages differed by parent’s sex, child sex, and reporter of autonomy support. Data of 497 adolescents (mean age at T1 = 13.03 years, percentage male = 56.9) and their parents from six annual waves of the Dutch study Research on Adolescent Development And Relationships (RADAR) were used. The results showed that stable differences between families explained most linkages between autonomy support and problem behavior. Adolescents with fewer problem behaviors have fathers (both child- and parent-reported) and mothers (only child-reported) who are more autonomy supportive. The results did not differ between boys and girls. The findings suggest that prior studies may have overstated the existence of a causal effect of parental autonomy support on adolescent problem behavior.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesThe overall aim of this study was to obtain a more nuanced understanding of linkages between autonomy support and adolescent problem behavior by unraveling the temporal ordering of parental autonomy support and adolescent problem behavior

  • Even though autonomy is a universal need across the life span, adolescence is generally considered a period in which children demand relatively more personal freedom in forming and expressing their opinions (Smetana et al 2005)

  • Since parental autonomy support has no causal influence on problem behaviors, and the same effects were not found for child-reported autonomy support, the findings provide little evidence for fatherchild activation theory

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Summary

Objectives

The overall aim of this study was to obtain a more nuanced understanding of linkages between autonomy support and adolescent problem behavior by unraveling the temporal ordering of parental autonomy support and adolescent problem behavior. The overall aim of this study was to examine longitudinal associations between parental autonomy support and adolescent problem behavior

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