Corporal punishment by American parents: National data on prevalence, chronicity, severity, and duration, in relation to child and family characteristics

被引:497
作者
Straus M.A. [1 ]
Stewart J.H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Family Research Laboratory, University of New Hampshire, Durham
关键词
Age; Corporal; Ethnic; Gender; Infant; Parent; Physical; Punishment; Region; SES; Spanking;
D O I
10.1023/A:1021891529770
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We present data on corporal punishment (CP) by a nationally representative sample of 991 American parents interviewed in 1995. Six types of CP were examined: slaps on the hand or leg, spanking on the buttocks, pinching, shaking, hitting on the buttocks with a belt or paddle, and slapping in the face. The overall prevalence rate (the percentage of parents using any of these types of CP during the previous year) was 35% for infants and reached a peak of 94% at ages 3 and 4. Despite rapid decline after age 5, just over half of American parents hit children at age 12, a third at age 14, and 13% at age 17. Analysis of chronicity found that parents who hit teenage children did so an average of about six times during the year. Severity, as measured by hitting the child with a belt or paddle, was greatest for children age 5-12 (28% of such children). CP was more prevalent among African American and low socioeconomic status parents, in the South, for boys, and by mothers. The pervasiveness of CP reported in this article, and the harmful side effects of CP shown by recent longitudinal research, indicates a need for psychology and sociology textbooks to reverse the current tendency to almost ignore CP and instead treat it as a major aspect of the socialization experience of American children; and for developmental psychologists to be cognizant of the likelihood that parents are using CP far more often than even advocates of CP recommend, and to inform parents about the risks involved.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 70
页数:15
相关论文
共 52 条
[41]  
Straus M.A., Asdigian N., There was an old women who lived in a shoe: Number of children and corporal punishment, Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, (1997)
[42]  
Straus M.A., Gelles R.J., Steinmetz S., Behind Closed Doors: Violence in the American Family, (1980)
[43]  
Straus M.A., Hamby S.L., Finkelhor D., Moore D.W., Runyan D., Identification of child maltreatment with the parent-child Conflict Tactics Scales: Development and psychometric data for a national sample of American parents, Child Abuse and Neglect, 22, pp. 249-270, (1998)
[44]  
Straus M.A., Mathur A.K., Social change and change in approval of corporal punishment by parents from 1968 to 1994, Family Violence Against Children: A Challenge for Society, pp. 91-105, (1996)
[45]  
Straus M.A., Mouradian V.E., Impulsive corporal punishment by mothers and antiosocial behavior and impulsiveness of children, Behavioral Sciences & The Law, 16, pp. 353-374, (1998)
[46]  
Straus M.A., Paschall M.J., Corporal punishment by mothers and child's cognitive development: A longitudinal study, 14th World Congress of Sociology, (1998)
[47]  
Straus M.A., Sugarman D.B., Giles-Sims J., Spanking by parents and subsequent antisocial behavior of children, Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, 151, pp. 761-767, (1997)
[48]  
Teske R.H.C., Parker M.L., Spouse Abuse in Texas: A Study of Women's Attitudes and Experiences, (1983)
[49]  
Thompson E.E., The short- and long-term effects of corporal punishment on children: A meta-analytic review, Psychological Bulletin
[50]  
Turner H., Corporal punishment and the stress process, Corporal Punishment of Children in Theoretical Perspective