Heterosexist discrimination and relational sacrifice of same‐sex couples

Author:

Li Xiaomin1ORCID,Zhao Zhenqiang2,Curran Melissa A.3ORCID,Mills‐Koonce Roger4,Cao Hongjian56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Social Sciences The Hong Kong Polytechnic University Kowloon Hong Kong SAR

2. Department of Psychology Fordham University New York New York USA

3. Department of Human Development and Family Sciences University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA

4. Department of Human Development and Family Studies, School of Education The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

5. Applied Psychology Program, School of Humanities and Social Science The Chinese University of Hong Kong (Shenzhen) Shenzhen China

6. Department of Human Development & Family Science Florida State University Tallahassee Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractDrawing on the family stress process model and using data from 141 same‐sex couples (N = 282 partners), we examined associations between heterosexist discrimination and relational sacrifices (i.e., willingness and behaviors). We also examined the moderating roles of both partners' internalized homophobia and state‐level liberalism on same‐sex marriage legalization. Actor‐partner interdependence moderation models were conducted. Most of our findings supported hypotheses from the family stress process model. One individual's experiences of greater heterosexist discrimination were related to the partner's higher levels of sacrifice willingness and the individual's own higher frequency of sacrifice behaviors. Such associations emerged (a) among couples living in more liberal states that legalized same‐sex marriage earlier, and (b) when the individual's partner reported lower levels of internalized homophobia. Yet the moderating role of an individual's internalized homophobia was the opposite of our hypothesis. When individuals reported high (versus low) internalized homophobia, individuals' experiences of more discriminative events were related to partners' higher levels of sacrifice willingness. Collectively, our study findings highlight that—when investigating how same‐sex couples forge and maintain romantic bonds—researchers should consider their experiences in the social cultural context of heteronormativity, which includes the focus on discrimination, stigma, and affirmative laws and policies.

Funder

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Life-span and Life-course Studies,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Anthropology,Social Psychology

Reference52 articles.

1. Internalized heterosexism, alcohol use, and alcohol-related problems among lesbians and gay men

2. American Civil Liberties Union. (2014).Marriages may go forward when mandate is issued in near future.https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/us-supreme-court-declines-review-indianas-same-sex-marriage-case-and-cases-wi-ok-ut

3. “Will you complete this survey too?” Differences between individual versus dyadic samples in relationship research.

4. A systematic review of relationship sacrifices from 2002 to 2021: Moving toward inclusivity

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