The Role of the Environment in Children’s Emotion Socialization

Author(s):  
Carolien Rieffe ◽  
Anouk P. Netten ◽  
Evelien Broekhof ◽  
Guida Veiga
2018 ◽  
Vol 46 (6) ◽  
pp. 969-984 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emine Ahmetoglu ◽  
Gökçen Ilhan Ildiz ◽  
Ibrahim H. Acar ◽  
Amy Encinger

We examined the associations among parental emotion socialization, and children's emotion regulation and attachment to parents. In particular, we examined the moderating role of parental emotion socialization in the relationship between children's emotion regulation and attachment to parents. Participants were 78 Turkish children (49 boys) aged from 60 to 77 months and their parents. Parents reported on the socialization strategies they used for their children's emotions and on their children's emotion regulation, and we assessed children's attachment to parents via the Doll Story Completion Task. Results revealed that parents' minimization reaction to children's emotions moderated the association between children's emotion regulation and attachment to parents. When parents' response was punitive, children with poor emotion regulation displayed stronger attachment to parents than children with robust emotion regulation did. In addition, girls had a more secure attachment to parents than boys did. Our results highlight the importance of children's emotion regulation and parental emotion socialization for children's secure early attachment to parents.


Author(s):  
Holly E. Brophy-Herb ◽  
Danielle Dalimonte-Merckling ◽  
Neda Senehi ◽  
Alicia Y. Kwon

Author(s):  
Heidi Keller

This chapter is based on an inextricable interrelationship between biology and culture that implies that there are universal and specific dimensions of psychological phenomena, including emotions. It is assumed that biological predispositions interact with environmental/cultural influences to shape human behavior and representational systems. After discussing the conceptions of emotions, culture, and cultural environment that underlie the discussion in this chapter, emotion socialization in different environments is presented. First, the Western middle-class child’s learning environment is portrayed before alternative developmental pathways are presented, in particular the rural farming context and some examples from non-Western urban middle-class families. Emotions are especially discussed with respect to their prevalence and centrality in socialization processes and cultural conventions of emotion expression. The author concludes that the evaluation of behaviors and behavioral representations developed in one culture with the standards of another culture is unscientific and unethical.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document