“…During the past decade, sociologists interested in the importance of the role of grandparents and other relatives in fulfilling family functions, have shed light on monetary relations beyond the nuclear household and, in particular, the flow of material resources downwards from older to younger generations (Kohli 1999, Attias-Donfut and Arber 2000, Bengtson 2001, Fritzell and Lennartssson 2005, Bjö rnberg and Latta 2007. Due to findings showing that people perceive not only the family but also friends as primary sources of social support (Markward et al 2003), there are reasons to assume that other kinds of relationships in the wider social network also supply important levels of protection, obligations, and responsibilities of importance for the individuals involved and thus, as a consequence, involve broader issues for social work practice.…”