“…For example, Silverstein et al (1997) identified five types of intergenerational solidarity in relationships between parents and their adult children: tight-knit, sociable, intimate but distant, obligatory, and detached. Similarly, Hwang et al (2022) classified five types of intergenerational solidarity among middle-aged children and their older parents across four parent–child gender combinations: tight-knit, intimate-but-distant, socially supportive, socially unsupportive, and detached. However, most studies have focused on selected dimensions of the seven dimensions of intergenerational solidarity in their typological analyses (Guo et al, 2012; Li et al, 2019; Steinbach, 2008; Yi & Lin, 2009), and rarely is conflict considered.…”