TY - JOUR
T1 - Digital mediation and family climate reported by children in Spain, Italy, and Portugal
AU - Ponte, Cristina
AU - Mascheroni, Giovanna
AU - Batista, Susana
AU - Garmendia, Maialen
AU - Martinez, Gemma
AU - Cino, Davide
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - onsidering parental mediation as a dual process that starts with the child and varies according to their age and online activities, this article examines digital socialization in the broader context of family communication. Based on the EU Kids Online questionnaire (2017-2019) which surveyed children (9-16 years old) in 19 countries, and on previous pan-European studies, the article explores results from Spain, Italy and Portugal in a comparative perspective among them and with then 19 countries average. In the three Latin countries, in line with the average, safety, support and family communication are more highlighted by children than digital socialization, which is marked by a protectionist and risk prevention approach. However, the three countries present variations in children’s perceptions about their online well-being, the support they use to deal with risks and their own role in digital socialization. Acknowledging these national differences favors appropriate interventions by decision makers of public safety and well-being policies, as well as from education, health, and family counseling professionals.
AB - onsidering parental mediation as a dual process that starts with the child and varies according to their age and online activities, this article examines digital socialization in the broader context of family communication. Based on the EU Kids Online questionnaire (2017-2019) which surveyed children (9-16 years old) in 19 countries, and on previous pan-European studies, the article explores results from Spain, Italy and Portugal in a comparative perspective among them and with then 19 countries average. In the three Latin countries, in line with the average, safety, support and family communication are more highlighted by children than digital socialization, which is marked by a protectionist and risk prevention approach. However, the three countries present variations in children’s perceptions about their online well-being, the support they use to deal with risks and their own role in digital socialization. Acknowledging these national differences favors appropriate interventions by decision makers of public safety and well-being policies, as well as from education, health, and family counseling professionals.
KW - EU Kids Online
KW - cross-national research
KW - digital socialization
KW - family communication
KW - parental mediation
KW - reverse mediation
KW - EU Kids Online
KW - cross-national research
KW - digital socialization
KW - family communication
KW - parental mediation
KW - reverse mediation
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/241275
U2 - 10.15847/OBSOBS17220232214
DO - 10.15847/OBSOBS17220232214
M3 - Article
SN - 1646-5954
VL - 17
SP - 210
EP - 224
JO - Observatorio
JF - Observatorio
ER -