Exploring the theory of resilient commitment in emerging adulthood: a qualitative inquiry

Doctor of Philosophy === School of Family Studies and Human Services === Amber V. Vennum === The purpose of this qualitative study was to explore how emerging adults (18-29 year olds) define commitment in romantic relationships and have created meaning from the positive and negative examples of comm...

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Main Author: Sibley, D. Scott
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18950
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-189502016-03-01T03:52:21Z Exploring the theory of resilient commitment in emerging adulthood: a qualitative inquiry Sibley, D. Scott Commitment Emerging adulthood Resilience Romantic relationships Decision-making Family of origin Individual & Family Studies (0628) Doctor of Philosophy School of Family Studies and Human Services Amber V. Vennum The purpose of this qualitative study was to explore how emerging adults (18-29 year olds) define commitment in romantic relationships and have created meaning from the positive and negative examples of commitment they have witnessed. Twenty (10 men, 10 women) unmarried emerging adults were interviewed individually. Through the use of grounded theory four themes emerged to explain how emerging adults have constructed their understanding of commitment: complete loyalty, investment in the relationship, continual communication, and parental influence. From observing negative and positive examples of commitment, emerging adults learned to discern healthy and unhealthy characteristics of romantic relationships, are working to be different, and have learned what to do to make a committed relationship work long term including the sub-themes of unitedly persevere, prioritize the relationship, consider your partner, give substantial effort, have fidelity. These results extend our knowledge about the model of resilient commitment, and the critical purpose of meaning making. Implications for intervening with emerging adults to strengthen future romantic relationship stability are discussed. 2015-04-20T14:09:00Z 2015-04-20T14:09:00Z 2015-04-20 2015 May Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18950 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Commitment
Emerging adulthood
Resilience
Romantic relationships
Decision-making
Family of origin
Individual & Family Studies (0628)
spellingShingle Commitment
Emerging adulthood
Resilience
Romantic relationships
Decision-making
Family of origin
Individual & Family Studies (0628)
Sibley, D. Scott
Exploring the theory of resilient commitment in emerging adulthood: a qualitative inquiry
description Doctor of Philosophy === School of Family Studies and Human Services === Amber V. Vennum === The purpose of this qualitative study was to explore how emerging adults (18-29 year olds) define commitment in romantic relationships and have created meaning from the positive and negative examples of commitment they have witnessed. Twenty (10 men, 10 women) unmarried emerging adults were interviewed individually. Through the use of grounded theory four themes emerged to explain how emerging adults have constructed their understanding of commitment: complete loyalty, investment in the relationship, continual communication, and parental influence. From observing negative and positive examples of commitment, emerging adults learned to discern healthy and unhealthy characteristics of romantic relationships, are working to be different, and have learned what to do to make a committed relationship work long term including the sub-themes of unitedly persevere, prioritize the relationship, consider your partner, give substantial effort, have fidelity. These results extend our knowledge about the model of resilient commitment, and the critical purpose of meaning making. Implications for intervening with emerging adults to strengthen future romantic relationship stability are discussed.
author Sibley, D. Scott
author_facet Sibley, D. Scott
author_sort Sibley, D. Scott
title Exploring the theory of resilient commitment in emerging adulthood: a qualitative inquiry
title_short Exploring the theory of resilient commitment in emerging adulthood: a qualitative inquiry
title_full Exploring the theory of resilient commitment in emerging adulthood: a qualitative inquiry
title_fullStr Exploring the theory of resilient commitment in emerging adulthood: a qualitative inquiry
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the theory of resilient commitment in emerging adulthood: a qualitative inquiry
title_sort exploring the theory of resilient commitment in emerging adulthood: a qualitative inquiry
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18950
work_keys_str_mv AT sibleydscott exploringthetheoryofresilientcommitmentinemergingadulthoodaqualitativeinquiry
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