A multiethnic community sample of 191 families with
four-year-old children in northern Norway was used to explore
whether parenting factors were associated with child behavior
problems, and whether these associations differed for boys and
girls or for the two main ethnic groups in this region: the
indigenous Sami and the majority Norwegians. The Child Behavior
Checklist (CBCL) and a semi-structured interview on
child-rearing were used as instruments. As would be expected
from a developmental perspective, elevated scores of child
behavior problems were associated with lower levels of parental
cuddling and with higher levels of physical punishment. Family
demographics such as low maternal age and single parenthood were
also associated with more behavioral problems. Girls seemed to
be more strongly influenced by child-rearing factors than boys.
Subgroup analyses suggested that for harsh treatment, patterns
of correlations differed between Sami and Norwegian groups,
especially for boys. A positive correlation between physical
punishment and externalizing problems emerged for Norwegian
boys, but not for Sami boys. Teasing/ridiculing was positively
correlated with internalizing problems for Norwegian boys, but
inversely correlated for Sami boys. These findings emphasize the
importance of taking the child

s cultural context and gender
into account when assessing parenting influences on behavioral
problems in children.
Key words CBCL - cross-cultural - parenting - preschool - Sami