This paper analyses the interactions amongst family, household and extended kin through an examination of two ‘circulations’ of children within rural Irish communities during the first half of the twentieth century: (1) the daily journey from home to school; (2) going to live with relatives other than parents. Drawing on life-history narratives, the article develops a new perspective on the stem-family system in Ireland by showing how ‘incomplete’ family households formed integral parts of local kinship circles and were deeply engaged in the veryday lives of ‘complete’ family households, including the promotion of extended family survival and social mobility
In this article, the author proposed the hypothesis that the nuclear family based on the nuclear fam...
The history of children and childhood in eighteenth-century Ireland has long been overlooked. Yet ov...
Kinship networks were fundamental in importance to family life in both the urban and rural settings ...
This paper analyses the interactions amongst family, household and extended kin through an examinat...
First this paper provides a stream of studies of the family and community in Ireland. A pioneer work...
At the beginning of the 20th century, Irish social structure was dominated by a class of small landh...
In this article, the author proposed the hypothesis that while the Irish family system moved from a ...
This article serves as an introduction to a special issue of Irish Economic and Social History (Vol....
The aim of this study is to treat some perspectives of the family and the community in Ireland in th...
The contribution of family, kin and community relations to sustaining a rural way of life was the p...
This paper sets out to clarify the characteristics of Irish household structure from a perspective o...
This article presents some preliminary results from a historical study of social mobility in Britain...
This paper presents some findings from a research project that sought to generate an empirical accou...
This qualitative analysis sets out to explore family narratives in an Irish context. The study explo...
This thesis examines cultural constructions of childhood and the experiences of children in Ireland ...
In this article, the author proposed the hypothesis that the nuclear family based on the nuclear fam...
The history of children and childhood in eighteenth-century Ireland has long been overlooked. Yet ov...
Kinship networks were fundamental in importance to family life in both the urban and rural settings ...
This paper analyses the interactions amongst family, household and extended kin through an examinat...
First this paper provides a stream of studies of the family and community in Ireland. A pioneer work...
At the beginning of the 20th century, Irish social structure was dominated by a class of small landh...
In this article, the author proposed the hypothesis that while the Irish family system moved from a ...
This article serves as an introduction to a special issue of Irish Economic and Social History (Vol....
The aim of this study is to treat some perspectives of the family and the community in Ireland in th...
The contribution of family, kin and community relations to sustaining a rural way of life was the p...
This paper sets out to clarify the characteristics of Irish household structure from a perspective o...
This article presents some preliminary results from a historical study of social mobility in Britain...
This paper presents some findings from a research project that sought to generate an empirical accou...
This qualitative analysis sets out to explore family narratives in an Irish context. The study explo...
This thesis examines cultural constructions of childhood and the experiences of children in Ireland ...
In this article, the author proposed the hypothesis that the nuclear family based on the nuclear fam...
The history of children and childhood in eighteenth-century Ireland has long been overlooked. Yet ov...
Kinship networks were fundamental in importance to family life in both the urban and rural settings ...