Goodwin, RobinRobinGoodwinProf. TANG So Kum, CatherineCatherineProf. TANG So Kum2020-12-122020-12-122005Personal Relationships, May 2005, vol. 5(2), pp. 183-190.1475-6811http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/6060Despite considerable previous research into acculturation processes and family stress, we know little about how different groups of individuals or families respond to planned political changes within a culture and the impact of their expectations on their daily relationships. This study examines the appraisals of 403 Hong Kong married individuals of the forthcoming handover of Hong Kong to China, the impact of these appraisals on relationship disagreements regarding the transition, and perceived changes in their relationships. Results suggest that negative (external) locus of control and pessimistic group norms are predictors of a threatening appraisal of the transition, and that this perceived threat was a significant predictor of perceived change in the couple's relationship. Age and education had direct impacts on perception of relationship change and intradyadic disagreements about the transition. Results are discussed in the light of the complex political and economic climate in the lead‐up to the handover of Hong Kong to China, as well as the broader literature on family stress, personal relationships, and social change.enThe transition to uncertainty?: The impacts of Hong Kong 1997 on personal relationshipsPeer Reviewed Journal Article10.1111/j.1475-6811.1998.tb00166.x