Ninety years after Lewin: The role of familism and attachment style in social networks characteristics across 21 nations/areas

Author:

Zhao Xian1ORCID,Gillath Omri2ORCID,Alonso-Arbiol Itziar3ORCID,Abubakar Amina4,Adams Byron G.567,Autin Frédérique8,Brassard Audrey9ORCID,Carcedo Rodrigo J.10,Catz Or11,Cheng Cecilia12,Conner Tamlin S.13,Igarashi Tasuku14,Kafetsios Konstantinos1516ORCID,Kamble Shanmukh17,Karantzas Gery18ORCID,Mendía-Monterroso Rafael Emilio19,Moreira João M.20,Nolte Tobias21,Ruch Willibald22,Sebre Sandra23,Suryani Angela24,Tagliabue Semira25,Xu Qi26,Zhang Fang27

Affiliation:

1. Northwestern University, USA

2. University of Kansas, USA

3. University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU, Spain

4. Aga Khan University, Kenya

5. University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

6. University of Johannesburg, South Africa

7. Ghent University, Belgium

8. Université de Poitiers, France

9. Université de Sherbrooke, Canada

10. University of Salamanca, Spain

11. Ashkelon Academic College, Israel

12. University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

13. University of Otago, New Zealand

14. Nagoya University, Japan

15. Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

16. Palacký University Olomouc, Czech Republic

17. Karnatak University, India

18. Deakin University, Australia

19. Universidad Rafael Landívar, Guatemala

20. University of Lisbon, Portugal

21. University College London, UK

22. University of Zurich, Switzerland

23. University of Latvia, Latvia

24. Atma Jaya Catholic University of Indonesia, Indonesia

25. Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy

26. New York University, USA

27. Assumption University, USA

Abstract

Drawing on the literature on person-culture fit, we investigated how culture (assessed as national-level familism), personality (tapped by attachment styles) and their interactions predicted social network characteristics in 21 nations/areas ( N = 2977). Multilevel mixed modeling showed that familism predicted smaller network size but greater density, tie strength, and multiplexity. Attachment avoidance predicted smaller network size, and lower density, tie strength, and multiplexity. Attachment anxiety was related to lower density and tie strength. Familism enhanced avoidance’s association with network size and reduced its association with density, tie strength, and multiplexity. Familism also enhanced anxiety’s association with network size, tie strength, and multiplexity. These findings contribute to theory building on attachment and culture, highlight the significance of culture by personality interaction for the understanding of social networks, and call attention to the importance of sampling multiple countries.

Funder

Basque Government to Research Groups

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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