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Long-term trends in intergenerational proximity: Evidence from a grandchild design.

Matthijs Kalmijn
Published in: Population, space and place (2021)
Competing claims exist about how the geographic distance between parents and their adult children has changed historically. A classic modernisation hypothesis is that people currently live further away from their parents than in the past. Others have argued for stability and the remaining importance of local family ties, in spite of a long-term decline in co-residence of adult children and parents. The current paper uses a novel design that relies on reports by grandchildren to study long-term changes in intergenerational proximity in the Netherlands. The analyses show that there has been a clear and continuous decline in intergenerational proximity between the 1940s and the 1990s. Mediation analyses show that educational expansion and urbanisation are the main reasons why proximity declined. No evidence is found for the role of secularisation and increasing international migration. Proximity to parents declined somewhat more strongly for women than for men.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • health insurance
  • pregnant women
  • emergency department
  • depressive symptoms
  • skeletal muscle
  • electronic health record
  • breast cancer risk