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Showing 2 results for Marital Stability

Fatemeh Bayat, Abolfazl Hatami Varzaneh, Fatemeh Jahanbakhshi,
Volume 24, Issue 94 (8-2025)
Abstract

Aim: In some marital relationships, although the structural stability of the family remains intact, spouses experience minimal emotional and psychological satisfaction. This study explored the factors influencing women’s persistence in stable yet dissatisfying marriages. Methods: A qualitative research design employing a conventional content analysis approach was used. Data were collected through in-depth, semi-structured interviews with 13 women who had remained in their marriages for at least 20 years despite dissatisfaction with their marital lives. Findings: The content analysis identified several key factors contributing to the continuation of these marriages, including economic considerations, children, family influences, cultural and social beliefs, individual personality traits, and spouse-related factors. Among these, financial dependence, concerns about children’s futures, social pressures, lack of essential independence skills, and positive behavioral changes in the spouse were particularly influential. Conclusion: Women’s persistence in stable yet dissatisfying marriages appears to result from an interplay of internal and external factors—economic dependence, the perceived needs of children, familial and social pressures, cultural beliefs, personality traits, and changes in the spouse’s behavior. No single factor alone determines the decision to stay or leave; rather, it is their dynamic interaction that shapes women’s choices. Understanding these dimensions can inform counseling practices and social interventions aimed at recognizing and addressing the needs and challenges of women in such circumstances


Dr Mokhtar Arefi, Badri Mahmoudi,
Volume 24, Issue 95 (12-2025)
Abstract

Aim: The main aim of this research is to developing the causal model of marital stability based on differentiation.. Method: The study used a correlation method, and 200 married women were selected from the parents of first-secondary school students in the first district of Kermanshah through cluster sampling. The participants completed Enrich's conflict management questionnaire (1982), the self-differentiation questionnaire by Scoron and Smith (2003), and Edwards et al.'s (1987) marital stability questionnaire. The data collected using PLS software has been used to examine the relationship between the research variables using structural equation path analysis.
 Finding: The results indicated that self-differentiation and marital stability are related with a path coefficient of 0.556, and self-differentiation and conflict management have a relationship with a path coefficient of (0.593). Conflict management and marital stability are linked with a path coefficient of (0.269), and self-differentiation and marital stability are related to the mediating role of conflict management, with a path coefficient of (0.716).Conclusion: People who are at a high level of differentiation. They manage couple conflicts better; Because they have the ability to regulate their emotions and have reached a better growth, they can have a constructive interaction with the other party and manage their functions, which will result in stability and marital satisfaction.


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