research article text
Types, Patterns of Romantic Relationships and Dating Delays among Urban Indian Emerging Adults
Abstract
Emerging adulthood is a subject of interest with changing socio-economic conditions in different sociocultural contexts. The peculiar familial arrangement and open markets in India are so intermingled that young adults’ identities seem to be a confluence of collectivist Indian and liberal Western cultures. This confluence results in the emergence of adult-like tendencies among Indian youth in late adolescence and early adulthood. This quantitative study examines the implications of emerging adulthood for the romantic relationships of urban Indian emerging adults. The participants were university students from several Indian states. The total sample size is N=510 (221 males and 289 females), unmarried individuals aged 18-25. The selection criteria include \u27no romantic relationship experience\u27 to have had \u27one in the past two years of study participation.\u27 The data are collected to study the association between socio-demographic profiles and types of romantic relationships having peculiar patterns. The typification of romantic connection by identifying underlying patterns is the most significant contribution. The study identified two categories of romantic relationship patterns: The First Romantic Relationship and the Last or Latest Romantic Relationship Pattern (whichever coincided with the time of data collection). Overall, the findings shed light on the lives of Indian emerging adults and their preoccupations beyond romantic relationships. The descriptive research design highlights areas for future research to examine the causes and effects of these relationships.- info:eu-repo/semantics/article
- info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
- Text
- Romantic Relationship
- Emerging Adulthood
- Late Adolescence
- Relationship Pattern
- Relationship Type
- First Romantic Relationship
- Last/Latest Romantic Relationship
- Urban India
- Emerging adulthood
- Romantic Relationships
- Urban India
- Geography of Love
- Social Work
- Sociology
- Social Sciences
- Psychology
- Public Health
- Arts and Humanities
- Northern and Southern India. The data covers emerging adults (18-25 years) between 2022-2023.)