Halpern-Manners Andrew, Robert Warren John, Raymo James, Adam Nicholson D
Indiana University.
University of Minnesota.
Soc Forces. 2015 Jun;93(4):1369-1396. doi: 10.1093/sf/sov005. Epub 2015 Feb 17.
Motivated by theoretical and empirical research in life course sociology, we examine relationships between trajectories of work and family roles across the life course and four measures of economic well-being in later adulthood. Using data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study (WLS), and multiple trajectory-generating methods, we first identify latent trajectories of work and family roles between late adolescence and age 65. We then model economic well-being (at age 65) as a function of these trajectories and contemporaneously measured indicators of older adults' work, family, and health statuses. Our central finding is that trajectories of work and family experiences across the life course have direct effects on later-life economic well-being, as well as indirect effects that operate through more proximate measures of work, family, and other characteristics. We argue that these findings have important implications for how social scientists conceptualize and model the relationship between later-life economic outcomes and people's work and family experiences across the life course.
受生命历程社会学理论和实证研究的启发,我们考察了整个生命历程中工作与家庭角色轨迹之间的关系,以及成年后期经济福祉的四项衡量指标。利用来自威斯康星纵向研究(WLS)的数据和多种轨迹生成方法,我们首先确定了从青春期后期到65岁之间工作和家庭角色的潜在轨迹。然后,我们将(65岁时的)经济福祉建模为这些轨迹以及同时测量的老年人工作、家庭和健康状况指标的函数。我们的核心发现是,整个生命历程中的工作和家庭经历轨迹对晚年经济福祉有直接影响,同时也有通过更直接的工作、家庭和其他特征衡量指标产生的间接影响。我们认为,这些发现对于社会科学家如何概念化和建模晚年经济结果与人们整个生命历程中的工作和家庭经历之间的关系具有重要意义。