The influence of the wider kin group on individual life-course transitions: results from the Pays de Herve (Belgium), 1846–1900

In this study an attempt is made to examine the influence of kinship on a series of individual transitions and behaviours that mark the life course (marriage, leaving home, out-migration and mortality). Moving beyond a ‘traditional’ view, in which kinship is restricted to the cohabitation group, the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Continuity and change 2002-12, Vol.17 (3), p.405-435
1. Verfasser: NEVEN, MURIEL
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description In this study an attempt is made to examine the influence of kinship on a series of individual transitions and behaviours that mark the life course (marriage, leaving home, out-migration and mortality). Moving beyond a ‘traditional’ view, in which kinship is restricted to the cohabitation group, the study tests both the effects of the household and of the family beyond the household in order to observe their independent, opposite, or complementary actions. All these issues must be considered within the more general context of the ‘nuclear hardship hypothesis’: should family links beyond the unit of cohabitation be taken into account? How far can family support isolated people?
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source MEDLINE; Sociological Abstracts; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Belgium
Belgium - ethnology
Cohabitation
Emigration and Immigration - history
Extended Family
Family - ethnology
Family Relations
Family Relations - ethnology
Family structure
History
History of medicine
History, 19th Century
Kinship
Kinship Networks
Life Stage Transitions
Marriage
Marriage - history
Migration
Mortality
Nineteenth Century
Social change
Social Change - history
Social history
title The influence of the wider kin group on individual life-course transitions: results from the Pays de Herve (Belgium), 1846–1900
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