Choi HwaJung, Schoeni Robert F, Wiemers Emily E, Hotz V Joseph, Seltzer Judith A
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, NCRC Building 14, GR109, 2800 Plymouth Road, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Institute for Social Research, Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, Department of Economics, University of Michigan, 426 Thompson Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
J Marriage Fam. 2020 Apr;82(2):822-840. doi: 10.1111/jomf.12606. Epub 2019 Oct 14.
This brief report presents contemporary national estimates of the spatial distance between residences of parents and adult children in the United States, including distance to one's nearest parent and/or adult child and whether one lives near all of their parents and adult children.
The most recent national estimates of parent-child spatial proximity come from data for the early 1990s. Moreover, research has rarely assessed spatial clustering of all parents and adult children.
Data are from the 2013 Panel Study of Income Dynamics on residential locations of adults 25 and older and each of their parents and adult children. Two measures of spatial proximity were estimated: distance to nearest parent or adult child, and the share of adults who have all parents and/or adult children living nearby. Sociodemographic and geographic differences were examined for both measures.
Among adults with at least one living parent or adult child, a significant majority (74.8%) had their nearest parent or adult child within 30 miles, and about one third (35.5%) had all parents and adult children living that close. Spatial proximity differed substantially among sociodemographic groups, with those who were disadvantaged more likely to have their parents or adult children nearby. In most cases, sociodemographic disparities were much higher when spatial proximity was measured by proximity to all parents and all adult children instead of to nearest parent or nearest adult child.
Disparities in having all parents and/or adult children nearby may be a result of family solidarity and also may affect family solidarity. This report sets the stage for new investigations of the spatial dimension of family cohesion.
本简要报告呈现了美国当代关于父母与成年子女居住地之间空间距离的全国性估计数据,包括与最近的父母和/或成年子女的距离,以及一个人是否居住在其所有父母和成年子女附近。
关于亲子空间接近度的最新全国性估计数据来自20世纪90年代初。此外,很少有研究评估所有父母和成年子女的空间聚集情况。
数据来自2013年收入动态面板研究中25岁及以上成年人及其每位父母和成年子女的居住地点。估计了两种空间接近度指标:与最近父母或成年子女的距离,以及所有父母和/或成年子女都居住在附近的成年人比例。对这两种指标都进行了社会人口统计学和地理差异分析。
在至少有一位在世父母或成年子女的成年人中,绝大多数(74.8%)的最近父母或成年子女在30英里范围内,约三分之一(35.5%)的所有父母和成年子女都居住在这么近的距离内。社会人口统计学群体之间的空间接近度差异很大,处境不利的人更有可能让父母或成年子女在附近。在大多数情况下,当用与所有父母和所有成年子女的接近度而非与最近父母或最近成年子女的接近度来衡量空间接近度时,社会人口统计学差异要大得多。
所有父母和/或成年子女都在附近的差异可能是家庭团结的结果,也可能影响家庭团结。本报告为家庭凝聚力空间维度的新研究奠定了基础。