Geographic distance and contact between middle-aged children and their parents: the effects of social class over 20 years.

This research derives and tests hypotheses from two alternative conceptual models: the modified extended family model, and the changing family constraints model, which takes into account recent changes in work and family life. The hypotheses address social class differences in geographic distance and contact frequency between middle-aged children and their parents over time. Simultaneous probit models are used to analyze distance and contact as jointly determined outcomes with data from the USC Longitudinal Study of Generations and Mental Health. Results from these analyses indicate that children's 1971 educational aspirations and social class positions predict 1991 distance and contact between generations. Parents who have lower 1991 incomes, however, live farther from children and talk with them on the telephone less frequently than higher-income parents. Thus, the effects of early social class position support the modified extended family model, whereas the effects of current social class position support the changing family constraints model.

[1]  Vern L. Bengtson,et al.  Factors That Predispose Middle-Aged Sons and Daughters to Provide Social Support to Older Parents. , 1995 .

[2]  G. Spitze,et al.  More Evidence on Women (and Men) in the Middle , 1990, Research on aging.

[3]  L. B. Rubin Families on the Fault Line , 1994 .

[4]  O. Stark Migration, Remittances, and the Family , 1988, Economic Development and Cultural Change.

[5]  D. Rubinfeld,et al.  Econometric models and economic forecasts , 2002 .

[6]  L. Lillard Sample Dynamics: Some Behavioral Issues , 1990 .

[7]  E. Litwak,et al.  Helping the elderly : the complementary roles of informal networks and formal systems , 1986 .

[8]  T. Parsons An Analytical Approach to the Theory of Social Stratification , 1940, American Journal of Sociology.

[9]  J. March,et al.  Aging : stability and change in the family , 1983 .

[10]  S. Preston,et al.  Demography of Aging , 1994 .

[11]  N. Astone,et al.  Welfare Realities: From Rhetoric to Reform , 1994 .

[12]  L. Waite,et al.  Keeping in Touch: How Women in Mid-life Allocate Social Contacts among Kith and Kin , 1992 .

[13]  A. Thornton Changing Attitudes toward Family Issues in the United States. , 1989 .

[14]  J M Lepkowski,et al.  The social stratification of aging and health. , 1994, Journal of health and social behavior.

[15]  M. Weber From Max Weber: Essays in sociology , 1946 .

[16]  E. Litwak GEOGRAPHIC MOBILITY AND EXTENDED FAMILY COHESION , 1960 .

[17]  C. Fischer,et al.  To Dwell among Friends: Personal Networks in Town and City. , 1984 .

[18]  P. Uhlenberg,et al.  The Role of Divorce in Men's Relations with Their Adult Children after Mid-life. , 1990 .

[19]  C. Tilly,et al.  On Uprooting, Kinship, and the Auspices of Migration1 , 1967 .

[20]  V. Bengtson,et al.  Intergenerational solidarity in aging families: An example of formal theory construction. , 1991 .

[21]  E. Brody "Women in the middle" and family help to older people. , 1981, The Gerontologist.

[22]  P. Uhlenberg,et al.  Family size and mother-child relations in later life. , 1990, The Gerontologist.

[23]  E. Crimmins,et al.  Interaction and Living Arrangements of Older Parents and their Children , 1990, Research on aging.

[24]  J. Angel,et al.  Motive and the geographic mobility of very old Americans. , 1995, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.

[25]  B. Douglas Bernheim,et al.  The Strategic Bequest Motive , 1985, Journal of Political Economy.

[26]  Mark S. Granovetter Getting a Job: A Study of Contacts and Careers , 1974 .

[27]  M. Gordon The American family: Past, present, and future , 1978 .

[28]  Ethel Shanas,et al.  Handbook of Aging and the Social Sciences , 1991 .

[29]  S. Preston,et al.  The Elderly and Their Kin: Patterns of Availability and Access , 1994 .

[30]  S. Crystal,et al.  Cumulative advantage, cumulative disadvantage, and inequality among elderly people. , 1990, The Gerontologist.

[31]  E. Litwak,et al.  A task-specific typology of intergenerational family structure in later life. , 1993, The Gerontologist.

[32]  A. Wister,et al.  Physical Distance and Social Contact between Elders and their Adult Children , 1988, Research on aging.

[33]  B. Ingersoll-Dayton,et al.  Reciprocal and nonreciprocal social support: contrasting sides of intimate relationships. , 1988, Journal of gerontology.

[34]  J. Wilkie The Decline in Men's Labor Force Participation and Income and the Changing Structure of Family Economic Support. , 1991 .

[35]  P. Schmidt,et al.  Limited-Dependent and Qualitative Variables in Econometrics. , 1984 .

[36]  Blue-Collar Marriage , 1967 .

[37]  M. Atkinson,et al.  Filial expectations, association, and helping as a function of number of children among older rural-transitional parents. , 1984, Journal of gerontology.

[38]  L. Whitbeck,et al.  Early family relationships, intergenerational solidarity, and support provided to parents by their adult children. , 1994, Journal of gerontology.

[39]  W. Korpi The Democratic Class Struggle , 2018, The Democratic Class Struggle.

[40]  S. Preston,et al.  Socioeconomic differences in adult mortality and health status. , 1994 .

[41]  V. Bengtson,et al.  Generational Difference and the Developmental Stake , 1971 .

[42]  V. Bengtson,et al.  Intergenerational Linkages: Hidden Connections in American Society , 1994 .

[43]  E. Litwak Occupational Mobility and Extended Family Cohension , 1960 .

[44]  B. K. Defo Mortality and Attrition Processes in Longitudinal Studies in Africa: An Appraisal of the Iford Surveys , 1992 .

[45]  Clifford C. Clogg,et al.  The Structure of Intergenerational Exchanges in American Families , 1993, American Journal of Sociology.

[46]  Bumpass Ll,et al.  Estimating levels of marital disruption: differential data quality by source and trends by race age at marriage and education. , 1992 .

[47]  G. Streib Participants and drop-outs in a longitudinal study. , 1966, Journal of gerontology.

[48]  F. Goldscheider,et al.  Coming Home Again: Returns to the Parental Home of Young Adults , 1990 .

[49]  P. Moen,et al.  The Concept of Family Adaptive Strategies , 1992 .

[50]  Barry Bluestone,et al.  The Deindustrialization of America , 1982 .

[51]  R. Avery,et al.  Who helps whom in older parent-child families. , 1993, Journal of gerontology.

[52]  M. Hout,et al.  The democratic class struggle in the United States, 1948-1992 , 1995 .

[53]  Determinants of the community living arrangements of older unmarried women. , 1984, Journal of gerontology.

[54]  B. Frankel,et al.  Geographic distance and intergenerational contact: An empirical examination of the relationship , 1989 .

[55]  M. Silverstein,et al.  Do close parent-child relations reduce the mortality risk of older parents? , 1991, Journal of health and social behavior.

[56]  Marta Tienda,et al.  Determinants of Extended Household Structure: Cultural Pattern or Economic Need? , 1982, American Journal of Sociology.

[57]  D. Hoyert Financial and Household Exchanges between Generations , 1991 .

[58]  J. Gubrium Time, roles and self in old age , 1976 .

[59]  W. Aquilino The likelihood of parent-adult child coresidence: effects of family structure and parental characteristics. , 1990 .

[60]  Reinhard Bendix,et al.  Class, status and power : a reader in social stratification , 1954 .

[61]  V. Bengtson,et al.  Social Mobility across Three Generations , 1996 .

[62]  N. Krause,et al.  Social class differences in social support among older adults. , 1995, The Gerontologist.

[63]  V. Bengtson Generation and Family Effects in Value Socialization. , 1975 .

[64]  R. Plotnick The Effects of Attitudes on Teenage Premarital Pregnancy and Its Resolution. , 1992 .

[65]  W. Wilson The truly disadvantaged : the inner city, the underclass, and public policy , 1988 .