Login / Signup

The intergenerational transmission of relationship instability: A focus on emerging adult on-off relationships.

Emily J CharvatChelsea L Garneau-RosnerJames Kale MonkColleen W Colaner
Published in: Family process (2022)
This study extends prior research on the intergenerational transmission of relationship instability by examining parents' history of on-off relationships as a predictor of emerging adults' own cycling (i.e., breaking up and renewing with the same romantic partner). Data were collected at a large mid-western university from 702 emerging adults (18-25 years old). Multinomial logistic regression was used to predict the likelihood that participants had cycled in a past or current relationship. Results show that parental cycling increased the likelihood of offspring cycling in a past or current relationship relative to never cycling, and greater uncertainty about the future of the relationship was a mechanism through which such transmission occurred. Findings from this study demonstrate that parental relationship instability can even be consequential for the transient relationships within emerging adulthood, making family history a productive area to explore for practitioners working with cyclical partners and/or emerging adults.
Keyphrases
  • high intensity
  • depressive symptoms
  • young adults
  • insulin resistance
  • artificial intelligence
  • human immunodeficiency virus