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Codependence and conduct disorder: Feminine versus masculine coping responses to abusive parenting practices

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Abstract

This study supported the hypothesis that codependence reflects a stereotypically feminine coping strategy to environmental stressors, while conduct disorder represents an alternate coping response reflecting stereotypically masculine behaviors. High school students (N= 218; 81% Anglo-American, 8% Asian-American, 5% Hispanic-American) completed measures of femininity/masculinity, codependence, conduct disorder, and unhealthy parenting practices. Multiple regression analyses revealed that codependence is related to parental abuse and femininity (R= .50). A marginal relationship between codependence and parental alcoholism was mediated by parental abuse, calling into question the validity of the codependence construct. Conduct disorder was related to parental abuse, masculinity, parental alcoholism, and gender (R= .62). The tendency to label stereotypically feminine coping strategies as pathological, while ignoring a more prevalent and destructive masculine coping strategy is discussed.

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Roehling, P.V., Koelbel, N. & Rutgers, C. Codependence and conduct disorder: Feminine versus masculine coping responses to abusive parenting practices. Sex Roles 35, 603–618 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01548255

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