The associations between self‐construal, emotional expressivity and acculturation among Arab immigrants

Author:

Van Assche Jasper123ORCID,Amin Azzam4,Abu‐Rayya Hisham M.56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Developmental, Personality and Social Psychology Ghent University Ghent Belgium

2. Center for Social and Cultural Psychology (CESCUP) Université Libre de Bruxelles Bruxelles Belgium

3. Optentia Research Unit North‐West University Vanderbijlpark South Africa

4. School of Psychology and Social Work Doha Institute for Graduate Studies Doha Qatar

5. Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Sciences University of Haifa Haifa Israel

6. School of Psychology & Public Health La Trobe University Melbourne Australia

Abstract

This contribution investigates differences in self‐construal and emotional expressivity among Arab immigrants and non‐immigrants. Furthermore, it examines the role of acculturation styles and perceived emotional acculturation in predicting these outcomes among Arab immigrants. Using a sample of 1249 self‐identified Arabs (629 immigrants in Western Europe and North America; 620 non‐immigrant Arabs in the Mashriq and Maghrib regions), we found that collectivist self‐construal was significantly lower, and positive emotional expressivity was significantly higher among immigrant, than non‐immigrant, Arabs. High home country acculturation (also in combination with high host country acculturation) was the strongest predictor of collectivist self‐construal. Immigrants' perception of the positive emotional expressivity of people in their host culture was the strongest predictor of their personal positive emotional expressivity. These results were replicated using the Euclidean distance method to measure acculturation. Hence, the study provides valuable insights into the relationships between self‐construal, emotional expressivity and acculturation styles, specifically among Arab immigrants.

Funder

Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Qatar National Research Fund

Publisher

Wiley

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