Dept. of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA; California Center for Population Research, UCLA, USA.
Soc Sci Res. 2012 Sep;41(5):1307-19. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2012.05.008. Epub 2012 May 11.
This study uses a factorial vignette design embedded in an Internet survey to investigate attitudes toward an adult child and parent living together in response to economic hardship. Over half of Americans said the desirability of intergenerational co-residence depends on particularistic aspects of the family, notably the quality of family relationships. Support for co-residence is greatest when the adult child is single rather than partnered. Support is weaker if the adult child is cohabiting rather than married to the partner, although groups with greater exposure to cohabitation make less of a distinction between cohabitation and marriage. Presence of a grandchild does not affect views about co-residence. There is more support for sharing a home when a mother needs a place to live than when the adult child does. Responses to open-ended questions show that individuals invoke both universalistic family obligations and particularistic qualities of family relationships to explain their attitudes.
这项研究采用了因子情境设计,并嵌入到互联网调查中,旨在调查人们在经济困难时期对成年子女与父母同住的态度。超过一半的美国人表示,代际同住的可取性取决于家庭的特殊方面,特别是家庭关系的质量。当成年子女单身而非与伴侣同住时,支持同住的比例最大。如果成年子女与伴侣同居而不是结婚,支持率就会降低,尽管与同居接触更多的群体在同居和婚姻之间的区别不大。是否有孙子孙女并不影响对同住的看法。当母亲需要住所时,比当成年子女需要住所时,更支持共同居住。对开放式问题的回答表明,个人既援引了普遍的家庭义务,也援引了家庭关系的特殊性质来解释他们的态度。