Adolescents' perceptions of mother-father dominance in family vacation decisions: a 25-society study

Affiliation auteurs!!!! Error affiliation !!!!
TitreAdolescents' perceptions of mother-father dominance in family vacation decisions: a 25-society study
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursCheng I-F, Su C-J, Liao H-H, Lorgnier N, Lebrun A-M, Yen W-S, Lan Y-F, Huang Y
JournalSERVICE BUSINESS
Volume13
Pagination755-778
Date PublishedDEC
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1862-8516
Mots-clésCross-societal study, Distribution of decision role, Family vacation decision, Mother-father relative influence (MFRI), Responsibility sharing with family (RSF)
Résumé

This study applies and builds on Davis and Rigaux's (J Consum Res 1(1):51-62, 1974) triangle of spousal dominance styles of family purchase decisions. We explored adolescents' perceptions of parents' dominance in family decisions by investigating mother-father relative influence (MFRI) and responsibility sharing with family for 15 issues relating to vacations. The results, derived from data collected in 25 societies, demonstrate a tendency toward an autonomic style of parents' decision-making for all sub-decisions and all societies except Turkey. Overall, both decision phases and cultural regions correlated with democratization of family vacation decisions. The relationship between sex-role specialization and societal cluster differed across sub-decision clusters. Further, societal effectiveness in general, individualism and long-term orientation were positively correlated with MFRI.

DOI10.1007/s11628-019-00404-6