Font Size: a A A

Exploring the relationship between marital expectations and marital satisfaction between married African immigrant couples and United States born married couples

Posted on:2010-01-13Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Central FloridaCandidate:Ngazimbi, Evadne EFull Text:PDF
GTID:1446390002975147Subject:Psychology
Abstract/Summary:
Marriage is still considered a universal institution in many countries worldwide. Marriage provides benefits for wives, husbands, children, families, and communities. Why Marriage Matters (Wilcox et al., 2005), outlined the benefits of marriage, including improved physical and mental health, biological and social benefits for husbands, wives, children and families in America. In sub-Saharan Africa benefits emanating from marriage included increased survival rates for young children (Omariba & Boyle, 2007); reduced maternal morbidity and mortality rates for women due to reduced risks from self-inflicted abortions (Garenne, Tollman, Kahn, Collins, & Ngwenya, 2001); and improved economic management in homes due to exchanging gender-specific tasks within households (Gezon, 2002). Despite these benefits, approximately half the marriages in the United States end in divorce (Raley & Bumpass, 2003; Smith, 2007). Reduced marital satisfaction leads to dissolution of marriages in the U. S. Marital expectations were associated with marital satisfaction (Juvva & Bhatti, 2006).;The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between marital expectations and marital satisfaction between African immigrant and United States born married couples. The independent variable was marital expectations, measured with the Marital Expectations Questionnaire (MEQ, Ngazimbi & Daire, 2008). The dependent variables were marital satisfaction, measured by the Relationship Assessment Scale (RAS, Hendrick, 1988), and the Relationship Pleasure Scale (RPS, PAIRS Foundation, 1993).;The participants were recruited from nine sites in six states located in three geographical regions. The regions were the Midwest, the West and the Pacific Northwest. They were recruited through faith-based leaders. Participants consisted of 87 couples and 35 individuals who participated without their spouses. This was a mixed methods design. In the quantitative section, three instruments were used to collect data: the MEQ, the RAS, and the RPS. The first section of the MEQ contained four open-ended questions which were used to collect qualitative data. Significant differences were found in the relationships between marital expectations and marital satisfaction between African immigrants and non-immigrants. Qualitative differences and similarities were found between African immigrant and U. S. born married couples. Implications of the findings are discussed for research, counselor education and clinical practice.
Keywords/Search Tags:Born married, Marital satisfaction, Marital expectations, Couples, African immigrant, United states, Relationship, Benefits
Related items
Kenyan couples in the American diaspora: Marital problems experienced by Kenyan immigrant couples in the United States
An examination of the relationship between family-of-origin health and marital satisfaction in Protestant Haitian American couples
Stability and change in the marital relationship during the transition to parenthood: The role of violated expectations regarding emotional support and the division of household labor
A longitudinal analysis of marital ideals from engagement to the first year of marriage. Marital ideals of engaged couples (study I). Marital ideals of the newly married: A longitudinal analysis (study II
Examining the behavioral and physiological components of communication skills training with married couples: Are differential effects mediated by the topic discussed and initial level of marital distress
The relationship between a theological understanding of marital commitment and a juridical articulation of marital consent in sacramental marriages in the United States
Newlywed couples' marital satisfaction and patterns of cortisol reactivity and recovery as a response to differential marital power
Relationship among length of combat deployments, spirituality, rank, finances, and marital satisfaction among Army couples
A phenomenological inquiry into married military couples' experience with a deployment process during the current Iraq and Afghanistan Wars
10 Marital Satisfaction and Social Networks with an Emphasis on African American Culture and Marriage