Generally, it is assumed that the family plays a key role in creating social capital in the community. Recent concern about community decline has been linked to widespread changes that have occurred within family life. It is argued that family \u27breakdown\u27 is in part responsible for low levels of trust and engagement in community life. Based on data from the Institute\u27s 2001 Families, Social Capital and Citizenship survey, this paper explores whether there is a link between changes in family ...
Divorce and remarriage usually imply a redefinition of family boundaries, with consequences for the ...
In the wake of vast social and economic changes, the nuclear family has lost its dominance, both as ...
At a time of renewed interest in the family, family associations are attracting increasing attention...
Concern about community decline, a prominent theme in the social capital literature, is often based...
There is much academic and policy interest in the capacity of ‘social capital’ to generate family le...
According to the decline thesis, the changes that have occurred within family life have undermined c...
This study uses the accounts of parents supplemented by those of their children (aged 13-17) to deve...
Previous studies have shown that family networks evolve over time. Nonetheless, little research has ...
The year 2014 was considered as the twentieth anniversary year of the family and in a sense acknowle...
In a national and international economy that requires fluid movement of both labor and capital, it i...
This paper explores the social change of the past 40 years through reporting the results of a restud...
To whom do spouses belong? Do they belong to their communities as well as each other and their immed...
The level (or scale) at which social capital can be conceptualised and measured ranges potentially f...
This article shows how social policy in the European Union (EU) fails to give proper attention to th...
In Australia, as in other nations, ‘social capital’ is being looked to as a means of stemming the ti...
Divorce and remarriage usually imply a redefinition of family boundaries, with consequences for the ...
In the wake of vast social and economic changes, the nuclear family has lost its dominance, both as ...
At a time of renewed interest in the family, family associations are attracting increasing attention...
Concern about community decline, a prominent theme in the social capital literature, is often based...
There is much academic and policy interest in the capacity of ‘social capital’ to generate family le...
According to the decline thesis, the changes that have occurred within family life have undermined c...
This study uses the accounts of parents supplemented by those of their children (aged 13-17) to deve...
Previous studies have shown that family networks evolve over time. Nonetheless, little research has ...
The year 2014 was considered as the twentieth anniversary year of the family and in a sense acknowle...
In a national and international economy that requires fluid movement of both labor and capital, it i...
This paper explores the social change of the past 40 years through reporting the results of a restud...
To whom do spouses belong? Do they belong to their communities as well as each other and their immed...
The level (or scale) at which social capital can be conceptualised and measured ranges potentially f...
This article shows how social policy in the European Union (EU) fails to give proper attention to th...
In Australia, as in other nations, ‘social capital’ is being looked to as a means of stemming the ti...
Divorce and remarriage usually imply a redefinition of family boundaries, with consequences for the ...
In the wake of vast social and economic changes, the nuclear family has lost its dominance, both as ...
At a time of renewed interest in the family, family associations are attracting increasing attention...