Relationship satisfaction among Turkish and British adults
Loading...
Date
Authors
Celenk, Ozgur
Goodwin, Robin
Van de Vijver, Alphonsius Josephus Rachel (Fons)
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Abstract
We tested three theories (adult attachment, autonomy/relatedness, and gender roles) to understand relationship satisfaction among 150 British and 170 Turkish adults, all involved in romantic relationships. Avoidance, relatedness, autonomy–relatedness, and masculinity mediated the relationship between culture and romantic relationship satisfaction. Additionally, as anticipated, Turkish participants scored lower on relationship satisfaction and autonomy whereas British participants scored lower on avoidance and relatedness. Contrary to expectation, gender role differences (differences between masculinity and femininity) in the United Kingdom were not significantly smaller than in Turkey. It is concluded that adult attachment provides a useful framework for understanding country-level differences.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Celenk, O. et al. 2011. Relationship satisfaction among Turkish and British adults. International journal of intercultural relations, 35:628-640. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijintrel.2011.02.013]