This paper explores the social change of the past 40 years through reporting the results of a restudy. It argues that social change can be understood, culturally, as involving a process of de-institutionalisation and, structurally, as involving differentiation within elementary family groups as well as within extended family networks. Family change is set in the context of changes in the housing and labour markets and the demographic, industrial and occupational changes of the past 40 years. These changes are associated with increases in women's economic activity rates and a decrease in their 'degree of domesticity'. They are also associated with increasing differentiation within families such that occupational heterogeneity is now found at...
Social institutions are so ancient that its origin cannot be easily outlined. They are formers of no...
Family change theory (Kagitcibasi, 1996, 2007) is an approach which can be used to explain how moder...
This paper takes as its starting point recent claims by Beck-Gernsheim (2002) that we are living in ...
This book addresses the complexity of family change. It draws on evidence from two linked studies, o...
Th is paper examines the family as a social group in the context of contemporarysocial changes and r...
Since the 1990s, international social science research has made a major contribution to the evidence...
At the beginning of the 1960s, Colin Rosser and Chris Harris worked together on a community study in...
The broadest frame of this paper is the question of what society in transition means for family tran...
Addressing the complexity of family change, this title draws on evidence from two linked studies, on...
Data on family change point to a greater flexibility in the entry and exit from relationships, a del...
This paper examines the influence of social and economic change on family structure and relationship...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This study is available via t...
Recently, the debate on which social entity can be defined as a family has been heated and often inc...
materials written for other purposes. I also included almost all of the February manuscript entitled...
The dynamics of family formation and disruption have changed in contemporary societies. Compared to ...
Social institutions are so ancient that its origin cannot be easily outlined. They are formers of no...
Family change theory (Kagitcibasi, 1996, 2007) is an approach which can be used to explain how moder...
This paper takes as its starting point recent claims by Beck-Gernsheim (2002) that we are living in ...
This book addresses the complexity of family change. It draws on evidence from two linked studies, o...
Th is paper examines the family as a social group in the context of contemporarysocial changes and r...
Since the 1990s, international social science research has made a major contribution to the evidence...
At the beginning of the 1960s, Colin Rosser and Chris Harris worked together on a community study in...
The broadest frame of this paper is the question of what society in transition means for family tran...
Addressing the complexity of family change, this title draws on evidence from two linked studies, on...
Data on family change point to a greater flexibility in the entry and exit from relationships, a del...
This paper examines the influence of social and economic change on family structure and relationship...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This study is available via t...
Recently, the debate on which social entity can be defined as a family has been heated and often inc...
materials written for other purposes. I also included almost all of the February manuscript entitled...
The dynamics of family formation and disruption have changed in contemporary societies. Compared to ...
Social institutions are so ancient that its origin cannot be easily outlined. They are formers of no...
Family change theory (Kagitcibasi, 1996, 2007) is an approach which can be used to explain how moder...
This paper takes as its starting point recent claims by Beck-Gernsheim (2002) that we are living in ...