Carr Deborah, Utz Rebecca L
Department of Sociology, Boston University, 100 Cummington Mall, Boston, MA 02215.
Department of Sociology, University of Utah, Social & Behavior Sciences Building, Salt Lake City, UT 84112-0250.
J Marriage Fam. 2020 Feb;82(1):346-363. doi: 10.1111/jomf.12609. Epub 2020 Jan 5.
Later-life families encompass the legal, biological, romantic, and kin-like relationships of persons ages 65 and older. Research on older families has flourished over the past decade, as population aging has intensified concerns regarding the capacities of families to care for older adults and the adequacy of public pension systems to provide an acceptable standard of living. Shifting patterns of family formation over the past half-century have created a context in which contemporary older adults' family lives differ markedly from earlier generations. Decreasing numbers of adults are growing old with their first and only spouse, with rising numbers divorcing, remarrying, forming non-marital romantic partnerships, or living single by choice. Remarriage and the formation of stepfamilies pose challenges and opportunities as older adults negotiate complex decisions such as inheritance and caregiving. Family relationships are consequential for older adults' well-being, operating through both biological and psychosocial mechanisms. We synthesize research from the past decade, revealing how innovations in data and methods have refined our understanding of late-life families against a backdrop of demographic change. We show how contemporary research refines classic theoretical frameworks and tests emerging conceptual models. We organize the article around two main types of family relationships: (1) marriage and romantic partnerships and (2) intergenerational relationships. We discuss how family caregiving occurs within these relationships, and offer three promising avenues for future research: ethnic minority and immigrant families; older adults without close kin ("elder orphans"); and the potentials of rapidly evolving technologies for intergenerational relationships and caregiving.
老年家庭涵盖了65岁及以上人群的法律、血缘、浪漫以及类似亲属的关系。在过去十年中,随着人口老龄化加剧了人们对家庭照顾老年人能力以及公共养老金体系提供可接受生活水平充足性的担忧,对老年家庭的研究蓬勃发展。过去半个世纪家庭构成模式的转变创造了一种背景,在这种背景下当代老年人的家庭生活与前几代人有显著不同。与自己的首任也是唯一配偶一起变老的成年人数量在减少,离婚、再婚、形成非婚姻浪漫伴侣关系或选择单身生活的人数在增加。再婚和继家庭的形成带来了挑战和机遇,因为老年人要协商诸如继承和照顾等复杂决定。家庭关系对老年人的幸福至关重要,通过生物和心理社会机制发挥作用。我们综合了过去十年的研究,揭示了在人口结构变化的背景下,数据和方法的创新如何完善了我们对老年家庭的理解。我们展示了当代研究如何完善经典理论框架并检验新兴概念模型。我们围绕两种主要的家庭关系来组织本文:(1)婚姻和浪漫伴侣关系;(2)代际关系。我们讨论了家庭照顾在这些关系中是如何发生的,并为未来研究提供了三条有前景的途径:少数族裔和移民家庭;没有近亲的老年人(“老年孤儿”);以及快速发展的技术在代际关系和照顾方面的潜力。