Author Bios (50 Words for each Author)

Yanbo Yao is a Professor in College of Tourism and Service Management at Nankai University, China. She is interested in tourism enterprise management, tourism and destination marketing, and tourism economy.

Guangmei Jia is a Ph.D, at College of Tourism Management and Service, Nankai University, China. She is interested in consumer behavior in tourism, and tourism and destination marketing.

Abstract (150 Words)

Adult children traveling with their parents is gaining increasing popularity. As adult children and parents grown up in different social environment, they have formed dissimilar beliefs and core values, which may cause decision-making disagreements when traveling together. However, there has been little research to understand how adult children handle the disagreement with their parents in family trip. Based on this, the current study aims to resolve this question. Moreover, given adult children usually show great filial piety to their parents, and have developed more power in family decision-making. The role of filial piety and decision-making power in adult children’s disagreement management deserve thorough investigations. Specifically, this study examines: (1) How adult children resolve the disagreement in family vacation decision-making; (2) How the filial duty and decision-making power of adult children influences their disagreement resolution. A mixed-methods approach including interviews and scenario-based experiments will be adopted to solve these two problems.

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Disagreement Resolution in Family Travel Decision-Making—The Role of Adult Children

Adult children traveling with their parents is gaining increasing popularity. As adult children and parents grown up in different social environment, they have formed dissimilar beliefs and core values, which may cause decision-making disagreements when traveling together. However, there has been little research to understand how adult children handle the disagreement with their parents in family trip. Based on this, the current study aims to resolve this question. Moreover, given adult children usually show great filial piety to their parents, and have developed more power in family decision-making. The role of filial piety and decision-making power in adult children’s disagreement management deserve thorough investigations. Specifically, this study examines: (1) How adult children resolve the disagreement in family vacation decision-making; (2) How the filial duty and decision-making power of adult children influences their disagreement resolution. A mixed-methods approach including interviews and scenario-based experiments will be adopted to solve these two problems.