Seltzer Judith A
Department of Sociology and California Center for Population Research, University of California, 264 Haines Hall, 375 Portola Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1551, USA, Tel.: +1 310 825 5646; ;
J Econ Soc Meas. 2015;40(1-4):257-273. doi: 10.3233/JEM-150403. Epub 2015 Aug 18.
I argue that the United States needs new survey data on intergenerational relationships in light of the dramatic demographic changes in parent-child and couple relationships that were not anticipated when many major family datasets were designed. Increases in nonmarital childbearing, the instability of parents' relationships and high rates of repartnering challenge conventional approaches to data collection on families. Large race-ethnic and socioeconomic differences in the extent of these changes and their impact on intergenerational support may contribute to growing inequality. A new study must collect data on both household relationships and relationships among family members who live apart because most U.S. parents and adult offspring do not co-reside. The survey should obtain information on the timing of family transitions and include multiple cohorts to take account of differences in societal conditions that influence family experiences. A longitudinal design would show how parent-child relationships unfold over time and build on past histories. The paper identifies the dimensions of intergenerational ties that should be measured and explains why existing data cannot address the need for a new study.
我认为,鉴于亲子关系和夫妻关系中发生了巨大的人口结构变化,而许多主要家庭数据集在设计时并未预料到这些变化,美国需要有关代际关系的新调查数据。非婚生育的增加、父母关系的不稳定以及再婚率居高不下,对传统的家庭数据收集方法构成了挑战。这些变化的程度及其对代际支持的影响在种族-族裔和社会经济方面存在巨大差异,这可能会加剧不平等。一项新的研究必须收集有关家庭关系以及不住在一起的家庭成员之间关系的数据,因为大多数美国父母和成年子女并不共同居住。该调查应获取有关家庭转变时间的信息,并纳入多个队列,以考虑影响家庭经历的社会状况差异。纵向设计将展示亲子关系如何随时间发展,并基于过去的历史。本文确定了应测量的代际关系维度,并解释了现有数据为何无法满足新研究的需求。