Journal Article

The home and the ‘hood: Associations between housing and neighborhood contexts and adolescent functioning

Published: 2016

Abstract:

Adolescents from low‐income families face various opportunities and constraints as they develop, with possible ramifications for their well‐being. Two contexts of particular importance are the home and the neighborhood. Using adolescent data from the first two waves of the Three‐City Study (N = 1,169), this study explored associations among housing problems and neighborhood disorder with adolescents’ socioemotional problems, and how these associations varied by parental monitoring and gender. Results of hierarchical linear models suggest that poor‐quality housing was most predictive of the functioning of girls and of adolescents with restrictive curfews, whereas neighborhood disorder was a stronger predictor for boys. Implications for future research on associations between housing and neighborhood contexts and adolescent development are discussed.

Authors

Alicia Doyle LynchElizabeth A. ShueyMargaret C. Elliott

Centre Member

Rebekah Levine Coley
Tama Leventhal

Citation

Elliott, M. C., Leventhal, T., Shuey, E. A., Lynch, A. D., & Coley, R. L. (2016). The home and the ‘hood: Associations between housing and neighborhood contexts and adolescent functioning. Journal of Research on Adolescence, 26(1), 194-206.