Marabel-Whitburn K, Marshall EM, Olsson CA, Macdonald JA, Spry EA, Aarsman SR, Letcher P, Kretschmer T, Greenwood CJ (2026)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2026
Book Volume: 36
Pages Range: e70184-
Journal Issue: 2
DOI: 10.1111/jora.70184
Adolescent experiences in close relationships play a seminal role in social-emotional development across the lifespan. Here, we examine the unique and combined effects of parent-child and peer relationship quality in adolescence (age 11-13 years) in shaping intimate partner relationship quality in young adulthood (age 19-28 years). Prospective data were from the Australian Temperament Project (n = 1117) and the TRacking Adolescents' Individual Lives Survey (n = 1512). Higher parent-child and peer relationship quality were associated with higher intimate partner relationship quality (βrange = 0.07-0.12), an effect that was strongest when both parent-child and peer relationships were of high quality (βrange = 0.13-0.19). No sex differences emerged. Results were consistent across both the ATP and TRAILS cohorts. Promoting healthy parent-child and peer relationships in early adolescence may help strengthen intimate partner relationships in young adulthood.
APA:
Marabel-Whitburn, K., Marshall, E.M., Olsson, C.A., Macdonald, J.A., Spry, E.A., Aarsman, S.R.,... Greenwood, C.J. (2026). The association between parent-child and peer relationship quality in adolescence and intimate partner relationship quality in young adulthood: A two-cohort longitudinal investigation. , 36(2), e70184-. https://doi.org/10.1111/jora.70184
MLA:
Marabel-Whitburn, Khya, et al. "The association between parent-child and peer relationship quality in adolescence and intimate partner relationship quality in young adulthood: A two-cohort longitudinal investigation." 36.2 (2026): e70184-.
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