This work examines what role children play in the re-partnering process in five European countries (Norway, France, Germany, Romania, and the Russian Federation) by addressing the following research questions: (1) To what extent do men and women differ in their re-partnering chances?; (2) Can gender differences in re-partnering be explained by the presence of children?; (3) How do the custodial arrangements and the child’s age affect the re-partnering chances of men and women? We use the partnership and parenthood histories of the participants in the first wave of the Generations and Gender Survey (United Nations, Generations and Gender Programme: Survey Instruments. United Nations, New York/Geneva, 2005) to examine the transition to moving...
This paper complements conventional economic analysis and presents a social norms interpretation to ...
In the present paper we investigate how fatherhood influences childbirth in the second union of men ...
This paper examines gender differences in “multipartner fertility” – i.e., having children with seve...
This work examines what role children play in the re-partnering process in five European countries (...
This work examines what role children play in the re-partnering process in five European countries (...
This article analyses the demographic and social determinants of repartnering after divorce in four ...
Background: With rising union instability across Europe, more individuals now re-enter the partner m...
Individuals increasingly enter a series of relationships during their reproductive years. As births ...
Background: with rising union instability across Europe, more individuals now re-enter the partner m...
This thesis is motivated by the wide family changes which started in the 1960s in Europe and the Uni...
The union trajectories of men and women have undergone a transformation in recent decades in most in...
This paper is an exploratory analysis of the impact of current and anticipated parenthood on cohabit...
This article tests the assumption that cohabitation makes a difference in the allocation of child ca...
Abstract This chapter examines gender differences in “multipartner fertility” – i.e., having childre...
We investigate the hypothesis that the propensity of a stepfamily couple to have a shared child is i...
This paper complements conventional economic analysis and presents a social norms interpretation to ...
In the present paper we investigate how fatherhood influences childbirth in the second union of men ...
This paper examines gender differences in “multipartner fertility” – i.e., having children with seve...
This work examines what role children play in the re-partnering process in five European countries (...
This work examines what role children play in the re-partnering process in five European countries (...
This article analyses the demographic and social determinants of repartnering after divorce in four ...
Background: With rising union instability across Europe, more individuals now re-enter the partner m...
Individuals increasingly enter a series of relationships during their reproductive years. As births ...
Background: with rising union instability across Europe, more individuals now re-enter the partner m...
This thesis is motivated by the wide family changes which started in the 1960s in Europe and the Uni...
The union trajectories of men and women have undergone a transformation in recent decades in most in...
This paper is an exploratory analysis of the impact of current and anticipated parenthood on cohabit...
This article tests the assumption that cohabitation makes a difference in the allocation of child ca...
Abstract This chapter examines gender differences in “multipartner fertility” – i.e., having childre...
We investigate the hypothesis that the propensity of a stepfamily couple to have a shared child is i...
This paper complements conventional economic analysis and presents a social norms interpretation to ...
In the present paper we investigate how fatherhood influences childbirth in the second union of men ...
This paper examines gender differences in “multipartner fertility” – i.e., having children with seve...