This article analyses how two co-residing generations contribute to the housework workload in Italy and France during the early 2000s. It studies the intergenerational exchange of time between young adults and their parents by indirectly comparing the level of domestic comfort enjoyed by young people in the two closely neighbouring countries. A focus on the reasons for staying in the parental home provides an explanation for the tendency of young Italian adults to prolong their stay in the family nest. The results of time-use surveys suggest that young Italians (especially young men) may benefit more than their French counterparts in co-residing with their parents. Beyond the compositional or structural effects, they perform fewer domestic ...
Do parents suffer when a child leaves their home or do they feel better and freer? In this perspecti...
The Transition to adulthood in Italy The authors use cross-sectional data in order to study the tr...
More than 80% of Italian men aged 18-30 live with their parents. We argue that one contributing fact...
This article analyses how two co-residing generations contribute to the housework workload in Italy ...
This article analyses how two co-residing generations contribute to the housework workload in Italy ...
Many studies have been dedicated to analyse the determinants of leaving the parental home by focusin...
The volume is the first to take a life-course approach to the study of domestic work in Italy. It pr...
International audienceBackground: Time and future perspectives are at the core of biographical studi...
Italians start adult activities such as leaving the parental home at a much later age than is common...
The present dissertation examines whether the heterogeneity of co-residence experiences and the nest...
he nest leaving period and the age at which individuals establish their own independent household ar...
Italy and Norway are characterized by different household patterns of young adults, with young Itali...
More than 80% of Italian men aged 18–30 live with their parents. We argue that one contributing fact...
For over 30 years, the delay in leaving the parental home has been a main distinctive feature of the...
The volume is the first to take a life-course approach to the study of domestic work in Italy. It pr...
Do parents suffer when a child leaves their home or do they feel better and freer? In this perspecti...
The Transition to adulthood in Italy The authors use cross-sectional data in order to study the tr...
More than 80% of Italian men aged 18-30 live with their parents. We argue that one contributing fact...
This article analyses how two co-residing generations contribute to the housework workload in Italy ...
This article analyses how two co-residing generations contribute to the housework workload in Italy ...
Many studies have been dedicated to analyse the determinants of leaving the parental home by focusin...
The volume is the first to take a life-course approach to the study of domestic work in Italy. It pr...
International audienceBackground: Time and future perspectives are at the core of biographical studi...
Italians start adult activities such as leaving the parental home at a much later age than is common...
The present dissertation examines whether the heterogeneity of co-residence experiences and the nest...
he nest leaving period and the age at which individuals establish their own independent household ar...
Italy and Norway are characterized by different household patterns of young adults, with young Itali...
More than 80% of Italian men aged 18–30 live with their parents. We argue that one contributing fact...
For over 30 years, the delay in leaving the parental home has been a main distinctive feature of the...
The volume is the first to take a life-course approach to the study of domestic work in Italy. It pr...
Do parents suffer when a child leaves their home or do they feel better and freer? In this perspecti...
The Transition to adulthood in Italy The authors use cross-sectional data in order to study the tr...
More than 80% of Italian men aged 18-30 live with their parents. We argue that one contributing fact...