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December 17, 2019

Researcher: Why holidays with family can be full of conflict

Jill Suitor. Credit: Purdue University photo/John Underwood
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Jill Suitor. Credit: Purdue University photo/John Underwood

Family gatherings over the holidays can be full of conflict for a variety of reasons, whether it's disagreements over religion and politics, arguments with in-laws or the recent loss of a family member.

Social science research can explain why many of these conflicts arise, says Jill Suitor, a distinguished professor of sociology in the College of Liberal Arts at Purdue University. Suitor is principal investigator of the Within-Family Differences Study, a 20-year study of more than 550 multigenerational families on the causes and consequences of and parental favoritism among parents and their adult children.

"But more than half the time," Suitor said, "those are incorrect based on what the moms themselves say about which children are their favorites. And these feelings are remarkably impervious to how much mothers go out their way not to play favorites."

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Provided by Purdue University

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