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Journal Article

Citation

Cassé JF, Finkenauer C, Oosterman M, van der Geest VR, Schuengel C. J. Interpers. Violence 2018; 33(6): 1008-1029.

Affiliation

VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0886260515614280

PMID

26581751

Abstract

Mothers with a history of institutional care in adolescence are often involved in high-conflict partner relationships, which may undermine relationships with children and confidence in oneself as a parent. Not all mothers think of themselves as bad parents under these circumstances. We turned to psychological resources as an explanation, focusing on mothers' trait self-control. The negative association between family conflict and parenting self-efficacy was tested for moderation by self-control among 104 mothers with a history of institutionalization for behavioral problems and delinquency during adolescence. We found a negative association between current family conflict and parenting self-efficacy among mothers with low self-control, and no significant association among mothers with high self-control. This study draws attention to the needs of high-risk mothers in their parenting role and demonstrates that self-control is a potential resource for mothers to balance the load presented by conflict in their families. The findings suggest new avenues for intervention.


Language: en

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