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Culture, Coping, and Context: Primary and Secondary Control among Thai and American Youth
Author(s) -
McCarty Carolyn A.,
Weisz John R.,
Wanitromanee Kanchana,
Eastman Karen L.,
Suwanlert Somsong,
Chaiyasit Wanchai,
Band Eve Brotman
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of child psychology and psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.652
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1469-7610
pISSN - 0021-9630
DOI - 10.1111/1469-7610.00496
Subject(s) - stressor , coping (psychology) , psychology , covert , anger , developmental psychology , social environment , clinical psychology , social psychology , linguistics , philosophy , political science , law
Do cultural values and traditions influence the development of coping styles ? To address this question, we compared self‐reports of coping by 6–14‐year‐olds in Thailand and the U.S. One hundred and forty‐one children were interviewed about six common stressors: separation from a friend, injection in a doctor's office, adult anger, peer animosity, school failure, and physical injury. Children's self‐reported coping methods were coded as overt or covert . Coping goals were coded as reflecting primary control (attempts to influence objective conditions), secondary control (attempts to adjust oneself to objective conditions), or relinquished control . Although findings revealed numerous cross‐national similarities, there were also multiple main and interaction effects involving culture, suggesting that sociocultural context may be critical to our understanding of child coping. Consistent with literature on Thai culture, Thai children reported more than twice as much covert coping as American children for stressors involving adult authority figures (i.e. adult anger, injection in doctor's office). Thai children also reported more secondary control goals than Americans when coping with separation, but American children were five times as likely as Thais to adopt secondary control goals for coping with injury. The findings support a model of coping development in which culture and stressor characteristics interact, with societal differences most likely to be found in situations where culture‐specific norms become salient.