Family First: Evidence of Consistency and Variation in the Value of Family versus Personal Happiness across 49 Different Cultures
Date
2023-03-22Author
Kryś, Kuba
Chun Yeung, June
Haas, Brian
van Osch, Yvette
Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra
Kocimska-Zych, Agata
Torres, Claudio
Selim, Heyla
Zelenski, John
Bond, Michael
Park, Joonha
Miu-Chi Lun, Vivian
Maricchiolo, Fridanna
Vauclair, Christin-Melanie
Poláčková Šolcová, Iva
Sirlopú, David
Xing, Cai
L. Vignoles, Vivian
van Tilburg, Wijnand
Teyssier, Julien
Sun, Chien-Ru
Serdarevich, Ursula
Schwarz, Beate
Sargautyte, Ruta
Røysamb, Espen
Romashov, Vladyslav
Rizwan, Muhammad
Pavlović, Zoran
Pavlopoulos, Vassilis
Okvitawanli, Ayu
Nadi, Azar
Nader, Martin
Mustaffa, Nur Fariza
Murdock, Elke
Mosca, Oriana
Mohorić, Tamara
Barrientos Marroquin, Pablo Eduardo
Malyonova, Arina
Liu, Xinhui
Lee, J. Hannah
Kwiatkowska, Anna
Kronberger, Nicole
Klůzová Kračmárová, Lucie
Kascakova, Natalia
Işık, İdil
Igou, Eric R.
Igbokwe, David
Hanke-Boerr, Diana
Gavreliuc, Alin
Garðarsdóttir, Ragna
Fülöp, Márta
Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer
Esteves, Carla Sofia
Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra
Denoux, Patrick
Charkviani, Salome
Baltin, Arno
Arevalo, Douglas
Appoh, Lily
Akotia, Charity
Adamovic, Mladen
Uchida, Yukiko
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Show full item recordAbstract
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 wellbeing.
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,
range -.02 to.48), but present in 98% of the studied countries, with statistical significance in 73-
75%, and variance across countries < 2%. 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.
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