Intimacy and self-disclosure in Ghanaian in-law relationships
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Intimacy and self-disclosure are strong indicators of relationship
stability and satisfaction. In-law relationships are described as
uncertain, and intimacy and self-disclosure may be tools used to
reduce these uncertainties. We adopt a socio-ecological approach
to examine how the Ghanaian ecology affords intimacy and self disclosure as relationship-enhancing tools in Ghanaian parent–
child-in-law relationships. We interviewed 17 individuals in
longstanding relationships in the Ashanti Region of Ghana on the
closeness of their in-law relationships. Data were analysed
inductively and thematically. Participants described the intimacy
in their in-law relationship as insecure, conditional, and unfamiliar.
Participants further used caution when disclosing personal
information to in-laws, a phenomenon they described as ‘fɛreɛ’ in
the in-law relationship. The findings suggest that intimacy and
self-disclosure may be relational tools that are afforded by some
ecologies and not others.
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Research Article