RT Article T1 Parenting Skills, Family Functioning and Social Support in Situations of Child-to-Parent Violence: a Scoping Review of the Literature JF Journal of family violence VO 37 IS 7 SP 1147 OP 1160 A1 Arias-Rivera, Shirley A1 Lorence, Bárbara A1 Hidalgo, Victoria A2 Lorence, Bárbara A2 Hidalgo, Victoria LA English YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1816391891 AB The aim of this study was to carry out a scoping review to analyze the available evidence regarding parenting skills, family functioning and social support in situations of CPV. When violent behavior occurs, roles, communication and emotional expression are affected, impacting both parenting skills and family functioning. The confluence of these variables could explain the perpetuation of violent behavior over time. The scoping review encompassed peer-reviewed articles published in English and Spanish from 2000 to 2019, located through searches carried out in relevant international databases (Web of Science, PsycINFO, Scopus, ERIC, Dialnet Plus). 22 relevant studies were identified. The collected data showed that, in situations of CPV, parents have low levels of perceived self-efficacy and difficulties regulating their emotions, and they display submissive behavior in parent–child interactions. The analyzed articles also described the presence of a negative family climate and a tendency to relativize violent acts perpetrated by children. Lastly, the evidence shows that social relations are altered by mistrust of formal support resources and a certain level of social isolation. The discussion of the obtained results highlights the need for interventions aimed at fostering parenting skills and improving formal support resources to enhance family functioning in situations of CPV. K1 scoping review K1 Social Support K1 Family Functioning K1 Parenting skills K1 Child-to-parent violence DO 10.1007/s10896-021-00316-y