With the COVID-19 pandemic, families are having to coordinate their behaviors to face new challenges, such as negotiating the social distancing measures that the family will or will not take in their daily interaction. This study utilizes Family Communication Patterns Theory to examine conversations that young adults reported having with their family members about social distancing measures and what factors predicted the outcomes of these disagreements. A family’s level of conversation orientation and the interaction of conversation orientation and conformity orientation predicted change in relational closeness due to the argument and the perceived positivity level of predicted outcome value levels for future interaction with these family members. Additionally, level of conformity orientation predicted perceived relational harm from disagreements about social distancing.
CITATION STYLE
Johnson, A. J., Bostwick, E. N., & Morrissey, B. S. (2021). Arguing about social distancing and family relationships. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 38(10), 2863–2885. https://doi.org/10.1177/02654075211040798
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