Immigrant generation, selective acculturation, and alcohol use among Latina/o adolescents

Citation

Eitle, Tamela McNulty; Wahl, Ana-Maria Gonzalez; & Aranda, Elizabeth (2009). Immigrant generation, selective acculturation, and alcohol use among Latina/o adolescents. Social Science Research. vol. 38 (3) pp. 732-742 , PMCID: PMC2699685

Abstract

Do alcohol use and binge drinking among Latina/o adolescents increase in the second and third generation? This study explores generational differences in alcohol use behaviors for three Latina/o ethnic groups. Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health on 1504 Latina/o adolescents in secondary school, we found that the factors associated with alcohol use behaviors differed across the Latina/o groups. For Mexican and Cuban adolescents, but not Puerto Ricans, immigrant generation was associated with alcohol use. For Mexican, but not Cuban adolescents, acculturation mediated the effect of immigrant generation on alcohol use behaviors. Although generally social capital and a co-ethnic presence were protective factors against alcohol use behaviors, we found that some forms of social capital were actually risk factors for Cubans and Puerto Ricans. Our results provide support for segmented-assimilation theory.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016%2Fj.ssresearch.2009.01.006

Keyword(s)

Alcohol

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Social Science Research

Author(s)

Eitle, Tamela McNulty
Wahl, Ana-Maria Gonzalez
Aranda, Elizabeth

Year Published

2009

Volume Number

38

Issue Number

3

Pages

732-742

DOI

10.1016/j.ssresearch.2009.01.006

PMCID

PMC2699685

Reference ID

1012