<HashMap><database>biostudies-literature</database><scores/><additional><omics_type>Unknown</omics_type><submitter>Zhao C</submitter><funding>NICHD NIH HHS</funding><funding>NIH HHS</funding><pubmed_abstract>&lt;h4>Objectives&lt;/h4>Ethnic-racial socialization is an important cultural-developmental process in U.S. Latinx families and can be influenced by the ethnic-racial compositions of family members' ecologies, much of which extends beyond their neighborhoods. This study examined the ethnic-racial compositions of mothers' mesosystems, operationalized using activity space methods, which capture the set of locations to which individuals are regularly exposed. For Aim 1, we used a person-centered approach to identify profiles of mothers differentiated by the ethnic-racial composition of the activity spaces they navigate. For Aim 2, we explored how identified mothers' activity space profiles predicted ethnic-racial socialization of their adolescents, including cultural socialization and preparation for bias.&lt;h4>Method&lt;/h4>The sample included Latinx adolescents (&lt;i>N&lt;/i> = 547; &lt;i>M&lt;/i>&lt;sub>W1age&lt;/sub> = 13.31 years; 55.4% girls; 89.6% U.S. born) and their mothers (&lt;i>n&lt;/i> = 271 at Wave 1) participating in the &lt;i>Caminos&lt;/i> study in Atlanta, Georgia. The present study analyzed data from Wave 5 (2020) and Wave 6 (2020-2021).&lt;h4>Results&lt;/h4>We identified four profiles of mothers' activity spaces, and these differentially predicted mothers' ethnic-racial socialization.&lt;h4>Conclusions&lt;/h4>Moving beyond the examination of ethnic-racial socialization within singular microsystems (e.g., residential neighborhoods), this study indicates that day-to-day ethnic-racial exposures encountered by Latina mothers may influence how mothers socialize their adolescent children around issues of ethnicity and race. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).</pubmed_abstract><journal>Cultural diversity &amp; ethnic minority psychology</journal><full_dataset_link>https://www.ebi.ac.uk/biostudies/studies/S-EPMC12306152</full_dataset_link><repository>biostudies-literature</repository><pubmed_title>Parenting in place: How Latina mothers' mesosystems shape ethnic-racial socialization.</pubmed_title><pmcid>PMC12306152</pmcid><funding_grant_id>R01 HD090232</funding_grant_id><pubmed_authors>Zhao C</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Roche KM</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>White RMB</pubmed_authors></additional><is_claimable>false</is_claimable><name>Parenting in place: How Latina mothers' mesosystems shape ethnic-racial socialization.</name><description>&lt;h4>Objectives&lt;/h4>Ethnic-racial socialization is an important cultural-developmental process in U.S. Latinx families and can be influenced by the ethnic-racial compositions of family members' ecologies, much of which extends beyond their neighborhoods. This study examined the ethnic-racial compositions of mothers' mesosystems, operationalized using activity space methods, which capture the set of locations to which individuals are regularly exposed. For Aim 1, we used a person-centered approach to identify profiles of mothers differentiated by the ethnic-racial composition of the activity spaces they navigate. For Aim 2, we explored how identified mothers' activity space profiles predicted ethnic-racial socialization of their adolescents, including cultural socialization and preparation for bias.&lt;h4>Method&lt;/h4>The sample included Latinx adolescents (&lt;i>N&lt;/i> = 547; &lt;i>M&lt;/i>&lt;sub>W1age&lt;/sub> = 13.31 years; 55.4% girls; 89.6% U.S. born) and their mothers (&lt;i>n&lt;/i> = 271 at Wave 1) participating in the &lt;i>Caminos&lt;/i> study in Atlanta, Georgia. The present study analyzed data from Wave 5 (2020) and Wave 6 (2020-2021).&lt;h4>Results&lt;/h4>We identified four profiles of mothers' activity spaces, and these differentially predicted mothers' ethnic-racial socialization.&lt;h4>Conclusions&lt;/h4>Moving beyond the examination of ethnic-racial socialization within singular microsystems (e.g., residential neighborhoods), this study indicates that day-to-day ethnic-racial exposures encountered by Latina mothers may influence how mothers socialize their adolescent children around issues of ethnicity and race. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).</description><dates><release>2025-01-01T00:00:00Z</release><publication>2025 Jul</publication><modification>2026-03-31T11:14:24.153Z</modification><creation>2025-08-28T03:09:53.486Z</creation></dates><accession>S-EPMC12306152</accession><cross_references><pubmed>40638281</pubmed><doi>10.1037/cdp0000760</doi></cross_references></HashMap>