Divorce and Relationships
HOW PARENTS' MARITAL STATUS AND STAGE OF INVOLVEMENT OF PREMARITAL COUPLES AFFECT RELATIONSHIP CHARACTERISTICS¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬______________¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬ and ______________Running Head: RELATIONSHIP CHARACTERISTICSJaquet, S.E. & Surra, C.A. (2001). Parental divorce and premarital couples: Commitment and other relationship characteristics. Journal of Marriage & the Family, 63, 627-638.The researchers suggest that parental divorce has the power to affect certain relationship characteristics of premarital couples. They say that people who have experienced divorce in the family see it as a breach of trust. This leads individuals to become hesitant in trusting their partners and question the longevity of their own relationships. The researchers also discuss two types of love seen in romantic relationships---passionate and friendship-based. They say that people who have experienced divorce in the family tend to experience passionate love more often because they find it difficult to experience the trust and security involved with friendship-based l
However, the findings of this study may only be representative of some of the possible outcomes of relationships had by people from divorced families. Couples also filled out Braiker & Kelley's measure of the relationship dimensions that included love, conflict and negativity, ambivalence about getting involved, and relationship maintenance. Each participant was interviewed separately from their partners and was asked questions about themselves as individuals and asked how their relationship evolved. ImplicationsThis study examined the affects of parental divorce on the relationships of premarital couples. The findings also suggest that for men, the effects of parental divorce are dependent upon the marital status of their female partner's parents. It is not a surprise that people from divorced families have difficulty committing because that is what they have experienced and therefore come to expect that their own relationships will not last. Journal of Marriage & the Family, 63, 627-638. There were 87 women and 75 men from divorced families. People from divorced families and at advanced stages in their relationships will have less trust in their partners than people from intact families will. Finally, level of satisfaction was assessed by Huston & Vangelisti's 7-point semantic differential scale with bipolar adjectives. People from divorced families will experience more passionate love in casual relationships than people from intact families.
Common topics in this essay:
Marriage Family,
Huston Vangelisti's,
Conclusion Parental,
Braiker Kelley's,
divorced families,
Markman's Likert-type,
Larzelere Huston's,
intact families,
people divorced,
people divorced families,
Surra CA,
parental divorce,
Surra Catherine,
people intact,
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premarital couples,
relationship characteristics,
Communication Studies,
stage involvement,
Grote Frieze's,
hypothesis people divorced,
hypothesis people,
passionate love,
divorced families levels,
ambivalence becoming involved,
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