“…In the United States, Latino immigrant adolescents and their parents can experience cultural stressors that result from navigating multiple cultural contexts, a negative context of reception, and experiencing discrimination (Cano, Schwartz, Castillo, Romero, et al, 2015;Gassman-Pines, 2015;Lorenzo-Blanco, Meca, Unger, Romero, Gonzales-Backen, et al, 2016;Schwartz et al, 2014Schwartz et al, , 2015, and these cultural stressors can negatively influence family functioning, emotional well-being, and health-risk behaviors among adolescents and parents. For example, in a daily diary study (Gassman-Pines, 2015), Mexican immigrant parents reported that, on days when they experienced workplace discrimination, they interacted less warmly and more aversely with their children, experienced lower emotional well-being, and reported more child internalizing and externalizing behaviors. In a longitudinal study with recent immigrant Latino families (Cano, Schwartz, Castillo, Unger, et al, 2015), positive family functioning predicted lower adolescent depressive symptoms and health-risk behaviors 6 months later, and family functioning was compromised in the presence of parent-child acculturation discrepancies.…”