Loading...
2 results
Search Results
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- The Impact of Coresidence Trajectories on Personal Networks During Transition to Adulthood: A Comparative PerspectivePublication . Aeby, Gaëlle; Gauthier, Jacques-Antoine; Gouveia, Rita; Ramos, Vasco; Wall, Karin; Cesnuitytè, VidaOver the life course, individuals develop personal networks that provide essential resources, sporadically or on a daily basis, such as instrumental, emotional, and informational support. Those personal networks are composed of family (i.e., primary and extended kin) and non family ties (i.e., friends, colleagues, acquaintances) (Pahl and Spencer 2004). The prominence of specific ties varies across the life course depending on life stages, transitions, and events. Following the linked-lives principle (Elder et al. 2003), these transitions trigger changes in household composition, promoting different types of relational interdependencies. The level of interdependence with some household members may have a cumulative effect by strengthening the bonds, whereas with others the effect may be more ephemeral and lead to the exclusion of such ties in current personal networks. Thus, coresidence trajectories, such as the experience of growing up in a two or one-parent family, leaving the parental home early or late, moving in with a partner or Iiving alone, becoming a partner, divorcing, and other events, will differentially influence the composition of personal networks.
- Coresidence as a Mechanism of Relational Proximity: The Impact of Household Trajectories on the Diversification of Personal NetworksPublication . Ramos, Vasco; Gouveia, Rita; Wall, KarinFor a long time, the household unit - that is, the 'ménage'- has been a privileged doorway to study family and personal life (Laslett I972;VaIl2005). Yet, the transformations of family arrangements associated with divorce, informal cohabitation, migration, and ageing alongside the pluralization of the life course have been challenging the heuristic potential of the household unit to capture family meanings and practices (Bonvalet and Lelièvre 2013). More recent approaches (e.g., the configurational perspective) highlight the importance of focusing instead on the networks of meaningful relationships in which individuals are embedded in their everyday lives that can go beyond the limits of the household (Widmer 2010).