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Young adults' partner preferences and parents' in‐law preferences across generations, genders, and nations.

Authors :
Locke, Kenneth D.
Mastor, Khairul A.
MacDonald, Geoff
Barni, Daniela
Morio, Hiroaki
Reyes, Jose Alberto S.
Vargas‐Flores, José de Jesús
Ibáñez‐Reyes, Joselina
Kamble, Shanmukh
Ortiz, Fernando A.
Source :
European Journal of Social Psychology; Aug2020, Vol. 50 Issue 5, p903-920, 18p, 5 Charts, 2 Graphs
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

To examine cultural, gender, and parent–child differences in partner preferences, in eight countries undergraduates (n = 2,071) and their parents (n = 1,851) ranked the desirability of qualities in someone the student might marry. Despite sizable cultural differences—especially between Southeast Asian and Western countries—participants generally ranked kind/understanding (reflecting interpersonal communion) highest, and intelligent and healthy (reflecting mental/physical agency) among the top four. Students valued exciting, attractive partners more and healthy, religious partners less than parents did; comparisons with rankings by youth in 1984 (i.e., from the parents' generation) suggested cohort effects cannot explain most parent–child disagreements. As evolutionary psychology predicts, participants prioritized wives' attractiveness and homemaker skills and husbands' education and breadwinner skills; but as sociocultural theory predicts, variations across countries/decades in gendered spousal/in‐law preferences mirrored socioeconomic gender differences. Collectively, the results suggest individuals consider their social roles/circumstances when envisioning their ideal spouse/in‐law, which has implications for how humans' partner‐appraisal capabilities evolved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00462772
Volume :
50
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
European Journal of Social Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
144868902
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2662