Published online: 30 August 2017Housing careers have important consequences for individuals' well-being. The present study focuses on the role of parents' housing careers in affecting the way and extent to which they provide economic support to their adult children. By adopting a family life course perspective, it shows that while housing tenure has relatively little effect on parents' transfer behaviour, mobility between different tenures can elicit or suppress intergenerational support moreover, the quality of the house positively affects intergenerational co-residence. Support received to acquire a home along one's life course has an important demonstration effect: those parents who have received their home as a gift or have received ec...
Returns to the parental home represent a dramatic housing career interruption that can have signific...
Through narrative interviews with younger adults and their parents , this paper explores how the ho...
In the UK and the US significant numbers of university graduates live with their parents, but little...
Housing careers have important consequences for individuals’ well-being. The present study focuses o...
Are adult children more likely to become homeowners for the first time if their parents are homeowne...
In this comprehensive volume, authors from across the social sciences explore how housing wealth tra...
The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract We inves...
The home and family have always been mutually embedded, with the former central to the realization a...
This study examines the inter-generational transmission of (dis)advantage through the housing system...
Across the developed world, young adults are now more likely to live with their parents than they we...
This work was supported by an Economic and Social Research award [grant number ES/L009498/1] and Isa...
Despite the continuing preference for homeownership, it has become increasingly difficult for young ...
Co-resident adult children may be a source of emotional and instrumental support for older parents, ...
We assess how the support parents provide to young adults as they leave school and begin working is ...
In Southern Europe, the exceptionally high rates of young adults living with their parents might in...
Returns to the parental home represent a dramatic housing career interruption that can have signific...
Through narrative interviews with younger adults and their parents , this paper explores how the ho...
In the UK and the US significant numbers of university graduates live with their parents, but little...
Housing careers have important consequences for individuals’ well-being. The present study focuses o...
Are adult children more likely to become homeowners for the first time if their parents are homeowne...
In this comprehensive volume, authors from across the social sciences explore how housing wealth tra...
The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract We inves...
The home and family have always been mutually embedded, with the former central to the realization a...
This study examines the inter-generational transmission of (dis)advantage through the housing system...
Across the developed world, young adults are now more likely to live with their parents than they we...
This work was supported by an Economic and Social Research award [grant number ES/L009498/1] and Isa...
Despite the continuing preference for homeownership, it has become increasingly difficult for young ...
Co-resident adult children may be a source of emotional and instrumental support for older parents, ...
We assess how the support parents provide to young adults as they leave school and begin working is ...
In Southern Europe, the exceptionally high rates of young adults living with their parents might in...
Returns to the parental home represent a dramatic housing career interruption that can have signific...
Through narrative interviews with younger adults and their parents , this paper explores how the ho...
In the UK and the US significant numbers of university graduates live with their parents, but little...