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Family First: Evidence of Consistency and Variation in the Value of Family Versus Personal Happiness Across 49 Different Cultures
Journal
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
ISSN
0022-0221
1552-5422
Date Issued
2023
Author(s)
Kuba Krys
June Chun Yeung
Brian W. Haas
Yvette van Osch
Aleksandra Kosiarczyk
Agata Kocimska-Zych
Heyla A. Selim
John M. Zelenski
Michael Harris Bond
Joonha Park
Vivian Miu-Chi Lun
Fridanna Maricchiolo
Christin-Melanie Vauclair
Iva Poláčková Šolcová
David Sirlopú
Cai Xing
Vivian L. Vignoles
Wijnand A. P. van Tilburg
Julien Teyssier
Chien-Ru Sun
Ursula Serdarevich
Beate Schwarz
Ruta Sargautyte
Espen Røysamb
Vladyslav Romashov
Muhammad Rizwan
Zoran Pavlović
Vassilis Pavlopoulos
Ayu Okvitawanli
Azar Nadi
Martin Nader
Nur Fariza Mustaffa
Elke Murdock
Oriana Mosca
Tamara Mohorić
Pablo Eduardo Barrientos Marroquin
Arina Malyonova
Xinhui Liu
J. Hannah Lee
Anna Kwiatkowska
Nicole Kronberger
Lucie Klůzová Kráčmarová
Natalia Kascakova
İdil Işık
Eric R. Igou
David O. Igbokwe
Diana Hanke-Boer
Alin Gavreliuc
Ragna B. Garðarsdóttir
Márta Fülöp
Vladimer Gamsakhurdia
Carla Sofia Esteves
Alejandra Domínguez-Espinosa
Patrick Denoux
Salome Charkviani
Arno Baltin
Douglas Arevalo
Lily Appoh
Charity Akotia
Mladen Adamovic
Yukiko Uchida
Type
journal-article
Abstract
<jats:p> People care about their own well-being and about the well-being of their families. It is currently, however, unknown how much people tend to value their own versus 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, range −.02 to.48), but present in 98% of the studied countries, with statistical significance in 73% to 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. </jats:p>