Parenting is the first environment that shapes children’s growth, but it shifts with history and culture. In this study, we examined generational and gender differences in parenting styles. A total of 360 participants took part, equally divided across three generations and two genders. A chi-square test showed a significant association between generation and parenting style, χ²(6, N = 360) = 61.50, p < .001, Cramer’s V = .29. The Partition generation reported more authoritarian (+4.52 residual) and neglectful (+2.17) parenting, while the Post-Liberalization generation reported more permissive parenting (+6.10 residual). The Transition group showed a balanced mix. Gender differences were not significant, χ²(3, N = 360) = 3.48, p = .32. However, a three-way chi-square confirmed a generation × gender interaction, χ²(15, N = 360) = 71.45, p < .001, Cramer’s V = .26. The findings show that parenting in Mizoram reflects both historical shifts and cultural context
Saihlupuii et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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