Changes in personal relationships: How social contexts affect the emergence and discontinuation of relationships

Abstract Although the average number of confidants and practical helpers in Dutch networks only slightly changes over seven years, we found considerable changes among these relationships over these years. To explain the stability of existing relationships as well as the emergence of new ones, we paid attention to meeting opportunities in specific social contexts, such as the work place, family, sports clubs, voluntary associations, and the neighborhood. Notably, we found that a lack of meeting opportunities is an important reason why many personal relationships are discontinued, and that a path-dependent use of social contexts makes new relationships more likely to emerge in a specific context if existing network members are already met in that context. Finally, it is proposed that care should be taken when interpreting changes in personal networks if one relies on information about networks that are delineated using only one name generating question.

[1]  C. Fischer,et al.  Networks and Places , 1977 .

[2]  James N. Baron,et al.  Resources and Relationships: Social Networks and Mobility in the Workplace , 1997 .

[3]  A. Bryman,et al.  The Sage Encyclopedia of Social Science Research Methods (three volumes) , 2003 .

[4]  Matthijs Kalmijn,et al.  Shared friendship networks and the life course: an analysis of survey data on married and cohabiting couples , 2003, Soc. Networks.

[5]  Matthijs Kalmijn,et al.  Homogeneity of social networks by age and marital status: A multilevel analysis of ego-centered networks , 2007, Soc. Networks.

[6]  Claude S. Fischer,et al.  A Research Note on Friendship, Gender, and the Life Cycle , 1983 .

[7]  P. V. Marsden,et al.  Core Discussion Networks of Americans , 1987 .

[8]  Beate Völker,et al.  Social contexts and personal relationships: The effect of meeting opportunities on similarity for relationships of different strength , 2008, Soc. Networks.

[9]  Peter V. Marsden,et al.  Interpretation and interview context: examining the General Social Survey name generator using cognitive methods , 1999, Soc. Networks.

[10]  B. Wellman,et al.  Social Connectivity in America: Changes in Adult Friendship Network Size From 2002 to 2007 , 2010 .

[11]  V. Nee,et al.  The Handbook of Rational Choice Social Research , 2013 .

[12]  John Levi Martin,et al.  Persistence of close personal ties over a 12-year period , 2006, Soc. Networks.

[13]  David L. Morgan,et al.  The stability of core and peripheral networks over time , 1997 .

[14]  Karen E. Campbell,et al.  GENDER DIFFERENCES IN URBAN NEIGHBORING , 1990 .

[15]  Matthew E. Brashears,et al.  Social Isolation in America: Changes in Core Discussion Networks over Two Decades , 2006 .

[16]  Gerald Mollenhorst,et al.  Shared contexts and triadic closure in core discussion networks , 2011, Soc. Networks.

[17]  Ronald S. Burt,et al.  Network items and the general social survey , 1984 .

[18]  Beate Völker,et al.  Social Contexts and Core Discussion Networks: Using a Choice-Constraint Approach to Study Similarity in Intimate Relationships , 2008 .

[19]  Tom A. B. Snijders,et al.  Multilevel analysis of personal networks as dependent variables , 1999, Soc. Networks.

[20]  L. Verbrugge Multiplexity in Adult Friendships , 1979 .

[21]  D. Perlman,et al.  Long-Standing Nonkin Relationships of Older Adults in the Netherlands and the United States , 2006 .

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

[23]  Kathleen Gerson,et al.  Personal Relations Across the Life Cycle , 1977 .

[24]  Academisch Proefschrift,et al.  Changes in the personal network after divorce , 2004 .

[25]  Beate Völker,et al.  WEAK TIES AS A LIABILITY , 2001 .

[26]  Roel Bosker,et al.  Multilevel analysis : an introduction to basic and advanced multilevel modeling , 1999 .

[27]  S. Feld Social Structural Determinants of Similarity among Associates , 1982 .

[28]  W. C. Carter,et al.  Placing Friendship in Context: Foci of activity as changing contexts for friendship , 1999 .

[29]  Matthew E. Brashears,et al.  Models and Marginals: Using Survey Evidence to Study Social Networks , 2009 .

[30]  Matthew E. Brashears,et al.  Small networks and high isolation? A reexamination of American discussion networks , 2011, Soc. Networks.

[31]  T. Tilburg,et al.  Losing and Gaining in Old Age: Changes in Personal Network Size and Social Support in a Four-Year Longitudinal Study , 1998 .

[32]  C. Fischer,et al.  Networks and places: social relations in the urban setting , 1977 .

[33]  Claire Bidart,et al.  Evolutions of personal networks and life events , 2005, Soc. Networks.

[34]  Devon D. Brewer,et al.  Forgetting in the recall-based elicitation of personal and social networks , 2000, Soc. Networks.

[35]  N. Shulman Life-Cycle Variations in Patterns of Close Relationships. , 1975 .

[36]  Robert L. Kahn,et al.  Convoys over the life course: attachment, roles, and social support , 1980 .

[37]  Claude S. Fischer,et al.  The 2004 GSS Finding of Shrunken Social Networks: An Artifact? , 2009 .

[38]  Barry Wellman,et al.  A decade of network change: Turnover, persistence and stability in personal communities☆ , 1997 .

[39]  Theo van Tilburg,et al.  Support networks before and after retirement. , 1992 .

[40]  Alain Degenne,et al.  The dynamics of personal networks at the time of entry into adult life , 2005, Soc. Networks.

[41]  Scott L. Feld,et al.  Describing Changes in Personal Networks over Time , 2007 .

[42]  P. V. Marsden,et al.  Models and Methods in Social Network Analysis: Recent Developments in Network Measurement , 2005 .

[43]  Anthony Paik,et al.  Social Isolation in America: An Artifact , 2013 .

[44]  S. Feld The Focused Organization of Social Ties , 1981, American Journal of Sociology.

[45]  Scott L. Feld,et al.  Structural embeddedness and stability of interpersonal relations , 1997 .