“…These include many African, Asian, Middle Eastern and Southern and Eastern European societies (Billari and Rosina 2005;Mehio-Sibai, Beydoun, and Tohme 2009;Izuhara 2010). More recently, research has slowly expanded to cover societies where multigenerational living is not a conventional household practice, including Australia (Cobb-Clark and Ribar 2009), Canada (Gee, Mitchell, and Wister 2003), the UK (UK Office for National Statistics 2012) and the US (Salcedo, Schoellman, and Tertilt 2012), though much of this work has focussed on the influence of immigration and late 2000s economic downturn as catalysts of the recent prominence of multigenerational living in these societies. Despite this, recent evidence suggests that in Australia, multigenerational living may not be fully explained by changing demographics and immigration rates, and instead reflects, at least to some degree, changing social norms and values (Flatau et al 2007, 67).…”