Abstract
Existing literature suggests that mixed race/ethnicity children are more likely to experience poor socioemotional wellbeing in both the US and the UK, although the evidence is stronger in the US. It is suggested that this inequality may be a consequence of struggles with identity formation, more limited connections with racial/ethnic/cultural heritage, and increased risk of exposure to racism.Using data from the UK Millennium Cohort Study (n = 13,734) and the US Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort (n ~ 6250), we examine differences in the socioemotional wellbeing of mixed and non-mixed 5/6 year old children in the UK and US and explore heterogeneity in outcomes across different mixed groups in both locations. We estimate a series of linear regressions to examine the contribution of factors that may explain any observed differences, including socio-economic and cultural factors, and examine the extent to which these processes vary across the two nations.We find no evidence of greater risk for poor socioemotional wellbeing for mixed race/ethnicity children in both national contexts. We find that mixed race/ethnicity children experience socio-economic advantage compared to their non-mixed minority counterparts and that socio-economic advantage is protective for socioemotional wellbeing. Cultural factors do not contribute to differences in socioemotional wellbeing across mixed and non-mixed groups.Our evidence suggests then that at age 5/6 there is no evidence of poorer socioemotional wellbeing for mixed race/ethnicity children in either the UK or the US. The contrast between our findings and some previous literature, which reports that mixed race/ethnicity children have poorer socioemotional wellbeing, may reflect changes in the meaning of mixed identities across periods and/or the developmental stage of the children we studied.
Highlights
A striking change in developed countries is the rapidly increasing numbers of mixed race/ethnicity people (McCubbin, McCubbin, Samuels, Zhang, & Sievers, 2013; Rees, Wohland, Norman, & Boden, 2011)
We find that mixed race/ethnicity children experience socio-economic advantage compared to their non-mixed minority counterparts and that socio-economic advantage is protective for socioemotional wellbeing
In this paper we examined the possibility that mixed race/ethnicity children were at risk of poor socioemotional wellbeing in the United Kingdom (UK) and the United States (US), how this might vary across these two national contexts and across different mixed race/ethnicity groups within these countries, and the factors that might underlie, or mitigate, this greater risk
Summary
A striking change in developed countries is the rapidly increasing numbers of mixed race/ethnicity people (McCubbin, McCubbin, Samuels, Zhang, & Sievers, 2013; Rees, Wohland, Norman, & Boden, 2011). Existing literature suggests that mixed race/ethnicity children are more likely to experience emotional, psychological and behavioral (socioemotional) difficulties than their non-mixed minority counterparts. This increased risk is considered to be independent of demographic and economic factors (Udry, Li, & Hendrickson-Smith, 2003) and to be a consequence of struggles with identity formation and more limited connections with the cultural heritage of parents (Bratter & Eschbach, 2005; Cooney & Radina, 2000; Lorenzo‐Blanco, Bares, & Delva, 2013; Root, 1992; Schlabach, 2013; Tizard & Phoenix, 2002; Udry et al, 2003), alongside increased risks of exposure to both overt racism (Alibhai-Brown, 2001; Ifekwunigwe, 2001) and more subtle forms of discrimination (Nadal, Sriken, Davidoff, Wong, & McLean, 2013). The multi-race/ethnic family itself may be stigmatized
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