How Families Still Matter
A Longitudinal Study of Youth in Two Generations
Vern L Bengtson author Timothy J Biblarz author Robert E L Roberts author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:17th Oct '02
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£34.99(9780521009546)
Offers surprising findings about the strength of family influence on children's careers and achievements.
This book casts doubt on much of the common wisdom about family decline during the last decades of the twentieth century. It finds that parents are no less important in shaping the careers and achievements of youth than they were a generation ago, despite divorce and working mothers.How Families Still Matter casts doubt on the conventional wisdom about family decline during the last decades of the twentieth century. The authors draw from the longest-running longitudinal study of families in the world - the Longitudinal Study of Generations, conducted at the University of Southern California - to discover whether parents are really less critical in shaping the life choices and achievements of their children than they were a generation ago. They compare the influence of parents (on self-confidence, values, and levels of achievement) on the Baby Boomer generation with that of Baby-Boomer parents on their own Generation-X children. The findings may surprise many readers. Generation-X youth showed higher levels of education, career attainments, and self-esteem than their parents as youth, and similar values were found across generations. They indicate the 'resilience' of family bonds across generations even against the backdrop of massive social and family changes since the 1960s.
'… a very theoretically sophisticated study which operates on a number of levels at the same time. This book is a valuable source for anyone trying to theorize generational and cohort change/development …'. Sociology
ISBN: 9780521804233
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
Weight: 520g
240 pages