Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Long-term impact of parental divorce on optimism and trust: Changes in general assumptions or narrow beliefs?

1990; American Psychological Association; Volume: 59; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1037/0022-3514.59.4.743

ISSN

1939-1315

Autores

Kathryn M. Franklin, Ronnie Janoff‐Bulman, John E. Roberts,

Tópico(s)

Family Dynamics and Relationships

Resumo

Two studies were conducted to examine the long-term impact of parental divorce on beliefs about the self and others.In Study 1, college-aged children of divorce and students from intact families did not differ on 8 basic assumptions or on measures of depression.Those whose parents had divorced, however, were less optimistic about the success of their own future marriages.Assumptions about the benevolence of people best predicted the marital optimism of the parental divorce group, but not of the intact family group.In Study 2, assumptions about the benevolence of people were explored in terms of trust beliefs.College-aged children of divorce and a matched sample from intact homes differed only on marriage-related beliefs, not on generalized trust.Children of divorce reported less trust of a future spouse and were less optimistic about marriage.Exploratory analyses found that continuous conflict in family of origin adversely affected all levels of trust.

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