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11 - The impact of peer relationships on aggression in childhood: inhibition through coercion or promotion through peer support

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 September 2009

Joan McCord
Affiliation:
Temple University, Philadelphia
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Summary

According to Patterson, Reid, and Dishion (1992), aversive interactional patterns within the family provide for the early training of young boys' aggression and antisocial behavior. The coercive family process refers to a pattern of reciprocal exchanges in which poor family management practices such as inconsistent and ineffective parental responses are coupled with the child's persistent aversive behavior. The typical pattern is one of escalation and negative reinforcements. The coercion process usually starts with an exchange of often trivial, innocuous responses between a parent and a child. It quickly degenerates as the two actors are prompted to accentuate the punitive aspect of their behavior so as to control or coerce the other. When one actor gives in (usually the parent), this cyclical pattern is terminated by the removal of the aversive stimuli (i.e., the child's aversive behavior), thus negatively reinforcing such behaviors. Hence, by this coercive process the child is likely to learn quickly to become the initiator and the victim of aggressive behavior while training his or her parents to use highly punitive strategies. Coercive family processes may originate from a combination of factors such as a difficult child, the lack of parental competence, and an exposure to environmental stressors, but the crucial point is that they are exacerbated by a process of negative reciprocal exchange and bolstered by intermittent negative reinforcements.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1995

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