2005
DOI: 10.1093/esr/jci036
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Educational Inequality and Family Relationships: Influences on Contact and Proximity

Abstract: In modern society, education has become a major element of stratification and differen tiation. This paper examines how educational differences across and within family relationships affect the content of the relationship, thereby focusing on proximity and contact between parents and adult children and between siblings. Hypotheses are developed about why education should matter, using theoretical arguments about preferences and constraints. The hypotheses are tested using a large new survey on family relations… Show more

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Cited by 114 publications
(154 citation statements)
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“…A large literature supposes that working class individuals are more strongly motivated by feelings of obligation and that they have a stronger orientation towards extended family, whereas middle-class members give priority to the nuclear family (see Johnson et al, 2000 andKalmijn, 2006) i . But it is not clear if this distribution is the result of different orientations towards family values among social classes or, if it is the result of structural differences in the ability to offer help.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A large literature supposes that working class individuals are more strongly motivated by feelings of obligation and that they have a stronger orientation towards extended family, whereas middle-class members give priority to the nuclear family (see Johnson et al, 2000 andKalmijn, 2006) i . But it is not clear if this distribution is the result of different orientations towards family values among social classes or, if it is the result of structural differences in the ability to offer help.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From the parents' perspective, affluent and higher educated parents can opt for buying services and keeping their privacy and autonomy from children, since higher educated individuals seem to be more oriented toward individual autonomy (Kalmijn, 2006). In addition, parents with higher education have lower levels of morbidity and longer life expectancy without incapacity than lower educated people (Guralnick et al, 1993;Reynolds et al, 1990); they also have less difficulty in managing access to health and social services (Rodriguez and Stoyanova, 2004;Sarasa, 2007).…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…First, to investigate differences among all dyads we used a continuous measure: Contact frequency is expressed as the number of times an adult child and his/her parent met in the past 12 months. For convenience of interpretation of our results, we constructed a continuous measure by recoding the variable in the following way: Daily contact (300), a few times a week (156), weekly (52), monthly (12), a few times (4), once (1) and not at all (0) (Kalmijn 2006). Secondly, to investigate differences within networks, we used a dichotomous measure: Whether (1) or not (0) the adult child in the dyad under study had fewer contacts with the parent than the network average.…”
Section: Dependent Variablementioning
confidence: 99%