Intimate Pride: a Tri-Nation Study on Associations between Positive Minority Identity
Aspects and Relationship Quality in Sexual Minorities from German-Speaking Countries
Investigations into the intimate relationships of sexual minorities are proliferating,
but often adopt a deficit-oriented and US-centered perspective. In this tri-nation
online study with sexual minority participants from Austria, Germany, and Switzerland
(N = 571), we (i) assessed the construct validity of the German version of a well-known
measure for positive minority identity aspects (the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual Positive
Identity Measure; LGB-PIM), and (ii) explored associations between these aspects (self-awareness,
authenticity, community, capacity for intimacy, and social justice) and self-reported
relationship quality. Model fit of the German version of the LGB-PIM was deemed acceptable.
Higher levels of positive minority identity aspects showed small to moderate associations
with higher levels of relationship quality in bivariate analyses, but only capacity
for intimacy was linked to relationship quality in higher-order models (controlling
for country, age, sexual orientation, gender identity, relationship length, and psychological
distress). Results remained robust in several sensitivity analyses. Our results highlight
the differential role of positive identity aspects for relationship functioning, with
capacity for intimacy as a fruitful leverage point for therapeutic work.