Krys, Kuba and Yeung, June Ch and Haas, Brian W and Van Osch, Yvette and Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra and Kocimska-Zych, Agata and Torres, Claudio and Selim, Heyla and Zelenski, John M and Bond, Michael Harris and Park, Joonha and Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi and Maricchiolo, Fridanna and Vauclair, Christin-Melanie and Šolcová, Iva Poláčková and Diaz, David Ricardo Sirlopu and Xing, Cai and Vignoles, Vivian and Van Tilburg, Wijnand and Teyssier, Julien and Sun, Chien-Ru and Serdarevich, Ursula and Schwarz, Beate and Sargautyte, Ruta and Røysamb, Espen and Romashov, Vladyslav and Rizwan, Muhammad and Pavlović, Zoran and Pavlopoulos, Vassilis and Okvitawanli, Ayu and Nadi, Azar and Nader, Martin and Mustaffa, Nur Fariza and Murdock, Elke and Mosca, Oriana and Mohorić, Tamara and Marroquin, Pablo Eduardo Barrientos and Malyonova, Arina and Liu, Xinhui and Lee, J Hannah and Anna, Kwiatkowska and Kronberger, Nicole and Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová and Kascakova, Natalia and Işık, İdil and Igou, Eric R and Igbokwe, David O and Hanke-Boer, Diana and Gavreliuc, Alin and Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B and Fülöp, Márta and Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer and Esteves, Carla Sofia and Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra and Denoux, Patrick and Charkviani, Salome and Baltin, Arno and Arevalo, Douglas and Appoh, Lily and Akotia, Charity and Adamovic, Mladen and Uchida, Yukiko (2023) Family first: Evidence of consistency and variation in the value of family versus personal happiness across 49 different cultures. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 54 (3). pp. 323-339. DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/00220221221134711 (In Press)
Krys, Kuba and Yeung, June Ch and Haas, Brian W and Van Osch, Yvette and Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra and Kocimska-Zych, Agata and Torres, Claudio and Selim, Heyla and Zelenski, John M and Bond, Michael Harris and Park, Joonha and Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi and Maricchiolo, Fridanna and Vauclair, Christin-Melanie and Šolcová, Iva Poláčková and Diaz, David Ricardo Sirlopu and Xing, Cai and Vignoles, Vivian and Van Tilburg, Wijnand and Teyssier, Julien and Sun, Chien-Ru and Serdarevich, Ursula and Schwarz, Beate and Sargautyte, Ruta and Røysamb, Espen and Romashov, Vladyslav and Rizwan, Muhammad and Pavlović, Zoran and Pavlopoulos, Vassilis and Okvitawanli, Ayu and Nadi, Azar and Nader, Martin and Mustaffa, Nur Fariza and Murdock, Elke and Mosca, Oriana and Mohorić, Tamara and Marroquin, Pablo Eduardo Barrientos and Malyonova, Arina and Liu, Xinhui and Lee, J Hannah and Anna, Kwiatkowska and Kronberger, Nicole and Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová and Kascakova, Natalia and Işık, İdil and Igou, Eric R and Igbokwe, David O and Hanke-Boer, Diana and Gavreliuc, Alin and Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B and Fülöp, Márta and Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer and Esteves, Carla Sofia and Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra and Denoux, Patrick and Charkviani, Salome and Baltin, Arno and Arevalo, Douglas and Appoh, Lily and Akotia, Charity and Adamovic, Mladen and Uchida, Yukiko (2023) Family first: Evidence of consistency and variation in the value of family versus personal happiness across 49 different cultures. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 54 (3). pp. 323-339. DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/00220221221134711 (In Press)
Krys, Kuba and Yeung, June Ch and Haas, Brian W and Van Osch, Yvette and Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra and Kocimska-Zych, Agata and Torres, Claudio and Selim, Heyla and Zelenski, John M and Bond, Michael Harris and Park, Joonha and Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi and Maricchiolo, Fridanna and Vauclair, Christin-Melanie and Šolcová, Iva Poláčková and Diaz, David Ricardo Sirlopu and Xing, Cai and Vignoles, Vivian and Van Tilburg, Wijnand and Teyssier, Julien and Sun, Chien-Ru and Serdarevich, Ursula and Schwarz, Beate and Sargautyte, Ruta and Røysamb, Espen and Romashov, Vladyslav and Rizwan, Muhammad and Pavlović, Zoran and Pavlopoulos, Vassilis and Okvitawanli, Ayu and Nadi, Azar and Nader, Martin and Mustaffa, Nur Fariza and Murdock, Elke and Mosca, Oriana and Mohorić, Tamara and Marroquin, Pablo Eduardo Barrientos and Malyonova, Arina and Liu, Xinhui and Lee, J Hannah and Anna, Kwiatkowska and Kronberger, Nicole and Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová and Kascakova, Natalia and Işık, İdil and Igou, Eric R and Igbokwe, David O and Hanke-Boer, Diana and Gavreliuc, Alin and Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B and Fülöp, Márta and Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer and Esteves, Carla Sofia and Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra and Denoux, Patrick and Charkviani, Salome and Baltin, Arno and Arevalo, Douglas and Appoh, Lily and Akotia, Charity and Adamovic, Mladen and Uchida, Yukiko (2023) Family first: Evidence of consistency and variation in the value of family versus personal happiness across 49 different cultures. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 54 (3). pp. 323-339. DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/00220221221134711 (In Press)
Abstract
People care about their own well-being, but also about the well-being of their families. It is currently however unknown how much people tend to value their own and their family’s well-being. A recent study documented that people value family happiness over personal happiness across four cultures. In this study, we sought to replicate this finding across a larger sample size (N = 12,819) and a greater number of countries (N = 49), We found that the strength of the idealization of family over personal happiness preference was small (average Cohen’s ds = .20 with country levels varying from -.02 to almost .48), but ubiquitous, i.e., direction presented in 98% of the studied countries, 73-75% with statistical significance and < 2% variance across countries. We also found that the size of this effect did vary somewhat across cultural contexts. In Latin American cultures highest on relational mobility, the idealization of family over personal happiness was very small (average Cohen’s ds for Latin America = .15 and .18), while in Confucian Asia cultures lowest on relational mobility, this effect was closer to medium (ds > .40 and .30). Importantly, we did not find strong support for traditional theories in cross-cultural psychology that associate collectivism with greater prioritization of the family versus the individual; country level individualism-collectivism was not associated with variation in the idealization of family versus individual happiness. Our findings indicate that no matter how much various populists abuse the argument of “protecting family life” to disrupt emancipation, family happiness seems to be a pan-culturally phenomenon. Family well-being is a key ingredient of social fabric across the world, and should be acknowledged by psychology and well-being researchers, and by progressive movements too.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | family; happiness; well-being; interdependent happiness; life satisfaction; culture; relational mobility |
Divisions: | Faculty of Science and Health Faculty of Science and Health > Psychology, Department of |
SWORD Depositor: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Date Deposited: | 12 Oct 2022 10:10 |
Last Modified: | 30 Oct 2024 20:58 |
URI: | http://repository.essex.ac.uk/id/eprint/33379 |
Available files
Filename: Accepted version.pdf