Keywords
family leisure, happiness, satisfaction with family life, quality time, quantity time
Abstract
In the context of family leisure, individuals are more likely to achieve happiness when recreating with their families in predictable activities and in familiar environments. This hypothesis was tested by comparing three models predicting individual happiness. The three models were grounded in distinct frameworks of family leisure incongruity: (a) the null model – all family leisure is equal; (b) activity incongruity model – familiar versus unfamiliar family activities; and (c) location incongruity model – indoor-home, outdoor-home, community, and beyond the community. Analyses used a sample of 1502 individuals in 751 families from the U.K. Models were assessed using multi-level modelling. Overall, results indicated that in the pursuit of happiness all family leisure is not equal. The best predictors of happiness in the context of family leisure were quality family leisure time spent in familiar activities inside the home. Implications for today’s families and future research are discussed.
Original Publication Citation
Melton, K. & Zabriskie, R. (2016). In the pursuit of happiness all family leisure is not equal. World Leisure Journal, DOI: 10.1080/16078055.2016.1228154
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Melton, Karen K. and Zabriskie, Ramon, "In the Pursuit of Happiness All Family Leisure Is not Equal" (2016). Faculty Publications. 8838.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/8838
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2016
Publisher
World Leisure Journal
Language
English
College
Marriott School of Business
Department
Experience Design and Management
Copyright Status
© 2016 World Leisure Organization
Copyright Use Information
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