Gender role beliefs and intercultural relationships
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2024
Abstract
The main objective of this study was to investigate the relationship between gender role beliefs and intercultural relationship quality for individuals in committed relationships, and between gender role beliefs and willingness to date outside one’s respective culture for individuals not in committed relationships. We also measured individual participants’ willingness to cross cultural boundaries when dating. The survey was available in both English and Spanish to increase sample size and accessibility. We ran separate regressions for singles and couples to estimate the relationship between gender role beliefs and the quality of close relationships. The findings revealed no significant correlation between gender role beliefs and couples’ relationship quality or between gender role beliefs and singles’ willingness. Therefore, this study contributes to research on cross-cultural relationships, showing that differences do not seem to define the quality of the relationship.
Journal Title
RAIS Journal for Social Sciences
Volume
8
Issue
1
First Page
45
Last Page
55
DOI
10.5281/zenodo.11238003
Recommended Citation
Bujor, Jessica and Bailey, Karl G. D., "Gender role beliefs and intercultural relationships" (2024). Faculty Publications. 5766.
https://digitalcommons.andrews.edu/pubs/5766