Mexican-Origin Children's Trajectories of Ethnic-Racial Pride from Childhood through Emerging Adulthood: Associations with Mothers and Fathers' Trajectories

J Youth Adolesc. 2024 Mar;53(3):685-700. doi: 10.1007/s10964-023-01902-7. Epub 2023 Nov 28.

Abstract

Ethnic-racial pride (positive feelings about one's ethnic-racial group) is critical to healthy identity development across the lifespan. Research on ethnic-racial pride development among Latinx populations has focused exclusively on youth, without regard to pride development amongst parents and relations between pride within family units. Using multivariate Latent Growth Curve Modelling among 674 Mexican-origin youth and their parents (673 mothers; 437 fathers), the trajectory of youth's pride from 5th grade through emerging adulthood (14 years/12 waves of data) as well as relations with parental pride trajectories were examined. Respondents' pride generally decreased from waves 1 to 7 (~age 11-17 in youth) and increased after wave 7. Youth's and mothers' trajectories were unrelated, but complex associations emerged between youth's and fathers' trajectories. This study supports the dynamic nature of ethnic-racial pride across distinct life stages and underscores the complex interplay of youth and parental pride trajectories, emphasizing the pivotal role parents may play in co-shaping identity development alongside their children.

Keywords: Ethnic-racial affirmation; Ethnic-racial pride; Latent growth curve modeling; Mexican American.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Child
  • Emotions
  • Fathers
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Mothers*
  • Parents*
  • Racial Groups