TY - JOUR
T1 - Causal Attributions for Problematic Family Interactions
T2 - A Qualitative, Cultural Comparison of Western Samoa, American Samoa, and the United States
AU - Poasa, Kris H.
AU - Mallinckrodt, Brent
AU - Suzuki, Lisa A.
PY - 2000/1
Y1 - 2000/1
N2 - A mixed quantitative and qualitative research design compared 23 U.S. college students to 25 students from Western Samoa and 25 from American Samoa, with regard to differences in cultural beliefs and attributions. Survey responses suggested that Samoan students endorsed significantly more vertical, collective and vertical, individualistic cultural attitudes than U.S. students. Qualitative analysis of narrative responses to four vignettes depicting family conflicts suggested cultural differences in patterns of attribution of blame and responsibility for resolving the conflicts. U.S. students emphasized stable, internal, global attributions to character flaws. Samoan students emphasized more easily changed, situation-specific attributions; nonlinear, multifaceted judgments of blame; deference to hierarchy in group relationships; and context-oriented resolutions that avoid individual confrontation and emphasize preservation of relationships.
AB - A mixed quantitative and qualitative research design compared 23 U.S. college students to 25 students from Western Samoa and 25 from American Samoa, with regard to differences in cultural beliefs and attributions. Survey responses suggested that Samoan students endorsed significantly more vertical, collective and vertical, individualistic cultural attitudes than U.S. students. Qualitative analysis of narrative responses to four vignettes depicting family conflicts suggested cultural differences in patterns of attribution of blame and responsibility for resolving the conflicts. U.S. students emphasized stable, internal, global attributions to character flaws. Samoan students emphasized more easily changed, situation-specific attributions; nonlinear, multifaceted judgments of blame; deference to hierarchy in group relationships; and context-oriented resolutions that avoid individual confrontation and emphasize preservation of relationships.
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U2 - 10.1177/0011000000281003
DO - 10.1177/0011000000281003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0034424547
SN - 0011-0000
VL - 28
SP - 32
EP - 60
JO - The Counseling Psychologist
JF - The Counseling Psychologist
IS - 1
ER -