Prof. TANG So Kum, CatherineCatherineProf. TANG So Kum2020-11-252020-11-251998Journal of Family Violence, 1998, vol. 13, pp. 113-130.0885-74821573-2851http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/6053The present study examines the impact of child and parent gender on parental violence across age span of children and their parents in Hong Kong Chinese families. A randomly selected community sample of 1,019 households was surveyed. Results indicate that, in general, boys experience more frequent parental violence than girls and mothers engage in more violent behaviors against their children than fathers. Parental violence shows a curvilinear pattern with age of children, peaking at age 8 for boys and age 3 for girls. There is a pattern of declining frequency of parental violence as parental age increases across child gender. Fathers exhibit an inverted ā€œUā€ pattern of violent behavior against their children, with a peak around age 31–40, while mothers have a steadily declining trend until age 46. Separate parental violence indices are constructed for boys and girls.enParental ViolenceChinese FamiliesAgeGenderFrequency of parental violence against children in Chinese families: Impaact of age and genderPeer Reviewed Journal Article10.1023/A:1022868922408