Families and Personal Networks An International Comparative Perspective

(sharon) #1

222


Olson, D. (1983). Families, what makes them work. Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage
Publications.
Pahl, R., & Spencer, L. (2004). Personal communities: Not simply families of
“fate” or “choice”. Current Sociology, 52(2), 199–221.
Quintini, G., Martin, J.  P., & Martin, S. (2007). The changing nature of the
school-to-work transition process in OECD countries (SSRN scholarly paper no.
ID 1884070). Rochester: Social Science Research Network. Available online:
http://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=1884070
Radcliffe-Brown, A.  R. (1940). On social structure. The Journal of the Royal
Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 70(1), 1–12.
Ramos, V., Gouveia, R., & Wall, K. (2017). Coresidence as a mechanism of
relational proximity: The impact of household trajectories on the diversifica-
tion of personal networks. In V. Česnuitytė, D.  Lück, & E.  D. Widmer
(Eds.), Family continuity and change: Contemporary European perspectives
(pp. 187–210). London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Smith, A., Wasoff, F., & Jamieson, L. (2005). Solo living across the adult life-
course. CRFR Research Briefing, 20.
Stankūnienė, V., & Maslauskaitė, A. (2008). Family transformation in the post-
communist countries: Attitudes towards changes. In C. Höhn, D. Avramov,
& I. E. Kotowska (Eds.), People, population change and policies. Lessons from
the population policy acceptance study (Vol. 16, 1st ed., pp.  113–140).
Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands.
Studer, M. (2013). Weighted Cluster library manual: A practical guide to creating
typologies of trajectories in the social sciences with R. LIVES working papers, 24.
Available online doi:10.12682/lives.2296-1658.2013.24
Terhell, E. L., Broese van Groenou, M. I., & van Tilburg, T. (2007). Network
contact changes in early and later postseparation years. Social Networks,
29 (1), 11–24.
Testa, M. R. (2014). On the positive correlation between education and fertility
intentions in Europe: Individual- and country-level evidence. Advances in
Life Course Research, 21, 28–42.
Thévenon, O. (2015). Aid policies for young people in Europe and the OECD
countries. Families and Society WP Series, 34, 1–53.
Valarino, I. (2014). The emergence of parental and paternity leaves in Switzerland:
A challenge to gendered representations and practices of parenthood? Lausanne:
Université de Lausanne, Faculté des sciences sociales et politiques.
Van de Velde, C. (2008). Devenir adulte: sociologie comparée de la jeunesse en
Europe. Paris: PUF.


J.-A. Gauthier et al.
Free download pdf