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Intergenerational Family Relations in Adulthood: Patterns, Variations, and Implications in the Contemporary United States
by
Swartz, Teresa Toguchi
in
Adult children
/ Adulthood
/ Child care
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Culture
/ Divorce
/ Economic conditions
/ Families
/ Families & family life
/ Family
/ Family members
/ Family Relations
/ General studies
/ Inequality
/ Intergenerational Relations
/ Intergenerational relationships
/ Kinship systems
/ Marital stability
/ Marriage
/ Nuclear Family
/ Parent-child relations
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Postmodernism
/ Race
/ Resources
/ Social forces
/ Social inequality
/ Social Processes
/ Social Reproduction
/ Social structure
/ Social support
/ Social values
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of the family. Age groups
/ Values
/ Young adults
2009
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Intergenerational Family Relations in Adulthood: Patterns, Variations, and Implications in the Contemporary United States
by
Swartz, Teresa Toguchi
in
Adult children
/ Adulthood
/ Child care
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Culture
/ Divorce
/ Economic conditions
/ Families
/ Families & family life
/ Family
/ Family members
/ Family Relations
/ General studies
/ Inequality
/ Intergenerational Relations
/ Intergenerational relationships
/ Kinship systems
/ Marital stability
/ Marriage
/ Nuclear Family
/ Parent-child relations
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Postmodernism
/ Race
/ Resources
/ Social forces
/ Social inequality
/ Social Processes
/ Social Reproduction
/ Social structure
/ Social support
/ Social values
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of the family. Age groups
/ Values
/ Young adults
2009
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Do you wish to request the book?
Intergenerational Family Relations in Adulthood: Patterns, Variations, and Implications in the Contemporary United States
by
Swartz, Teresa Toguchi
in
Adult children
/ Adulthood
/ Child care
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Culture
/ Divorce
/ Economic conditions
/ Families
/ Families & family life
/ Family
/ Family members
/ Family Relations
/ General studies
/ Inequality
/ Intergenerational Relations
/ Intergenerational relationships
/ Kinship systems
/ Marital stability
/ Marriage
/ Nuclear Family
/ Parent-child relations
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Postmodernism
/ Race
/ Resources
/ Social forces
/ Social inequality
/ Social Processes
/ Social Reproduction
/ Social structure
/ Social support
/ Social values
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of the family. Age groups
/ Values
/ Young adults
2009
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Intergenerational Family Relations in Adulthood: Patterns, Variations, and Implications in the Contemporary United States
Journal Article
Intergenerational Family Relations in Adulthood: Patterns, Variations, and Implications in the Contemporary United States
2009
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Overview
Recent research suggests that intergenerational relations—the relationships between adult children and their parents in particular—are becoming increasingly important to Americans. Two main social forces appear to be driving these changes: marital instability and broader demographic shifts. Intergenerational relationships involve both affectiveties and more instrumental forms of support such as financial resources or child care. Although actual material assistance tends to be episodic and primarily responsive to specific needs, these relationships appear to be durable and flexible and often fill in when marriage or other emotional attachments deteriorate. As such, intergenerational family relations may reflect adaptations to contemporary, postmodern economic and cultural conditions. Variations in these general patterns and dynamics are also exhibited, the most striking of which are those involving race and class. These variations are driven largely by social structure and position and suggest that intergenerational relations constitute an important and largely hidden aspect of how families contribute to the reproduction of social inequality in society. These findings reinforce the value of extending both scholarly and cultural notions of family beyond the traditional nuclear family model.
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