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The relationship between perceived parenting style, filial piety, and life satisfaction in Hong Kong.
108
Citations
29
References
2014
Year
Quality Of LifeFamily MedicineChild Well-beingLife SatisfactionFamily InvolvementMedicineFamily RelationshipParenthood StudiesHong KongReciprocal Filial PietyFamily InteractionParenting StyleSocial SciencesFamily LifeFamily RelationshipsFamily DynamicPsychologyChild Development
This study examined the relationship between perceived parenting style, filial piety, and life satisfaction among Chinese young adults. A survey was administered to 395 university students in Hong Kong on their perceptions about their parents' parenting practices, filial piety beliefs, and life satisfaction. The results suggest that perceived authoritative parenting is associated with reciprocal filial piety and contributes positively to the young adults' life satisfaction. Both perceived authoritative and authoritarian parenting were associated with authoritarian filial piety, but authoritarian filial piety was not associated with young adults' life satisfaction. Due to the familial interdependence emphasized in the Chinese cultural context, Chinese adolescents' filial beliefs are related to the parenting they have experienced, and these beliefs may be associated with their psychosocial outcomes.
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