Affiliation:
1. Escuela de Gobierno Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez Santiago Chile
2. Department of Public Policy, Management, and Analytics University of Illinois Chicago Chicago Illinois USA
Abstract
AbstractThis paper estimates the acute effect of community‐level homicides on early childhood language development and explores the moderating role of maternal efficacy and satisfaction in Chile. It uses data from the 2017 wave of the Early Childhood Longitudinal Survey of Chilean Children (N = 1194, Mage: 52.8 months, 52% girls). Children in municipalities with homicides 1 month before the Peabody Picture Vocabulary assessment scored between 0.18 and 0.41 SDs lower compared to children in the same municipality but for whom homicides happened after the assessment. On average, higher maternal satisfaction appears to have a protective effect, though it dissipates in the most violent municipalities. Evidence that higher maternal efficacy protects children from the negative effects of violence is inconclusive.
Subject
Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health