1st Edition

Changing Relationships

Edited By Malcolm Brynin, John Ermisch Copyright 2009
    264 Pages 19 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    264 Pages 19 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Some relationships are within the family -- such as between parents and children, grandparents and children and between siblings -- while others are between friends. In some cases, these distinctions are blurred (Are short-term partners family members? Are family members seen as such when relations become unfriendly? Does divorce, if amicable, replace a family with a friendship?). Using quantitative, cutting-edge statistical analysis, in conjunction with a multi-disciplinary approach, the contributors to this volume address the contemporary state of and dynamics in these various types of relationships, linking these to key rites of passage such as leaving home, marriage and childbirth, to see how these stand after a period of rapid social change. The book will be of interest to scholars in a broad range of disciplines, including sociology, social policy and economics.

    Part I: Forming and Maintaining Relationships  1. Introduction: The Social Significance of Relationships John Ermisch & Malcolm Brynin  2. Living Apart Together John Ermisch & Thomas Siedler  3. Gender Differences in Close Friendship Networks over the Life Cycle Michèle Belot  4. Leaving Home Maria Iacovou & Lavinia Parisi  5. The Social Significance of Homogamy Malcolm Brynin, Simonetta Longhi & Álvaro Martínez Pérez  6. How Close are Couples? Malcolm Brynin, Simonetta Longhi & Álvaro Martínez Pérez  Part II: Relationships and Social Welfare  7. Young Child-Parent Relationships John Ermisch  8. Adult Child-Parent Relationships John Ermisch  9. Gender and Time Use over the Life Course Man Yee Kan & Jonathan Gershuny  10. Residential Mobility, Mobility Preferences and Psychological Health Priscila Ferreira & Mark Taylor  11. Early Labour Market Experience and the Timing of Family Formation Emilia Del Bono  12. Unemployment and Partnership Dissolution Morten Blekesaune  13. Marital Splits and Income Changes over the Longer Term Stephen Jenkins

    Biography

    Malcolm Brynin is a researcher at ISER University of Essex. He undertakes research on education, employment, and the family. He has published articles on the returns to education and to skills, and on the gender implications of educational and technological change.

    John Ermisch is a researcher at ISER University of Essex. His latest book, An Economic Analysis of the Family (2003), and numerous articles in economic and demographic journals demonstrate how the standard analytical methods of microeconomics can help us understand resource allocation and the distribution of welfare within the family.