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Description
(Short description)
A mixed-methods study on personal relations and social influence on family formation
(Text)
How do young adults decide to become parents or to remain childless? Is this an individual choice, a couple's decision or are there other social influences involved, such as social networks? Using a mixed-methods design, Sylvia Keim combines problem-centred interviews and network data collected among young adults in western Germany. The author shows that personal relations strongly influence the perceptions, attitudes, and plans individuals express concerning parenthood. She identifies basic mechanisms and channels of social influence as well as relevant network structures.
This book is valuable reading for academics, students, and policy makers interested in family research, the network perspective, and mixed-methods research.
(Table of content)
Aus dem Inhalt:
The Social Network Perspective - Fertility and Family Formation - Making Decisions about Parenthood - Personal Relations, Social Influences, and Social Networks - Fertility Decline, Social Networks, and Individualization
(Short description)
(Text)
How do young adults decide to become parents or to remain childless? Is this an individual choice, a couple's decision or are there other social influences involved, such as social networks? Using a mixed-methods design, Sylvia Keim combines problem-centred interviews and network data collected among young adults in western Germany. The author shows that personal relations strongly influence the perceptions, attitudes, and plans individuals express concerning parenthood. She identifies basic mechanisms and channels of social influence as well as relevant network structures.
This book is valuable reading for academics, students, and policy makers interested in family research, the network perspective, and mixed-methods research.
Contents
The Social Network Perspective - Fertility and Family Formation - Making Decisions about Parenthood - Personal Relations, Social Influences, and Social Networks - Fertility Decline, Social Networks, and Individualization



