The dialectic link between trust and privacy: Black and Latinx Women’s perspectives on digital sharing practices in romantic relationships
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-1-2025
Abstract
Based on open-ended survey data of 400 women who self-identify as either Black or Latinx, this study examines women’s digital media sharing practices in romantic relationships amid a growing trend towards the personalization of digital technologies. Communication Privacy Management (CPM) theory as well as scholarship on privacy and trust in romantic relationships frame our work. Approximately 56% of participants said romantic partners should not have access to each other’s social media accounts, 24% said they should, and 20%, said that access needed to be negotiated based on situational and personal factors (e.g., seriousness of the relationship, special circumstances). Justifications for sharing included having nothing to hide, trust, and a desire for open communication in the relationship. Explanatory themes for keeping social media and smartphone access private focused on trust, privacy, risk of conflict, and the need to respect a person’s individuality and personal boundaries. Interestingly, trust was a major motivator for both granting and denying access. We make sense of this duality of trust through the introduction of a trust/privacy dialectic relationship that extends current scholarship on CPM in romantic relationships.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
First Page
547
Last Page
567
Recommended Citation
Ramirez, F., & Bolaños-Carpio, A. (2025). The dialectic link between trust and privacy: Black and Latinx Women’s perspectives on digital sharing practices in romantic relationships. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 42 (2), 547-567. https://doi.org/10.1177/02654075241302846