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Yount, Kathryn M.; Cunningham, Solveig A.; Engelman, Michal; Agree, Emily M. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2012
In Egypt, kin relations have been governed by a patriarchal contract, which defines expectations for intergenerational support along gendered lines. Social changes may be disrupting these customs and bringing attention to the ways gender may influence intergenerational support in rapidly changing contexts. Using data from 4,465 parent-child dyads…
Descriptors: Mothers, Daughters, Foreign Countries, Gender Differences
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Cong, Zhen; Silverstein, Merril – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2011
This investigation examined whether intergenerational exchanges of time and money resources between older parents and their adult sons in rural China were conditioned on sons' migration status. Data derived from 2001 and 2003 waves of a longitudinal study of 1,126 parents, aged 60 and older, living in rural areas of Anhui Province, China, and…
Descriptors: Dependents, Rural Areas, Foreign Countries, Migrants
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Spellings, Carolyn R.; Barber, Brian K.; Olsen, Joseph A. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2012
The growing literature on youth and political conflict has not included an adequate focus on youth activism. To address this deficit, this study used youth- and parent-reported data (N = 6,718) from the 1994-1995 Palestinian Family Study to test an ecological model of family influence (parents' activism, expectations for their adolescents'…
Descriptors: Activism, Adolescents, Family Influence, Daughters
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Cong, Zhen; Silverstein, Merril – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2012
This investigation integrated vignette and survey design to study how sons' reduced availability and daughters' increased contributions to parents influenced Chinese rural elders' gendered filial expectations, measured with their beliefs about obligations of a vignette daughter and a vignette son to their postsurgery parent. The sample included…
Descriptors: Daughters, Older Adults, Foreign Countries, Migration
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Xie, Yu; Zhu, Haiyan – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2009
The patriarchal structure of the traditional Chinese family suggests that sons, more than daughters, provide financial support to elderly parents. The norm of receiving support in old age primarily from sons, however, may have been undermined by dramatic demographic, economic, and cultural changes occurring over the last several decades in China,…
Descriptors: Daughters, Family Life, Older Adults, Urban Areas
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Cong, Zhen; Silverstein, Merril – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2008
This study examined the influence of intergenerational assistance with household chores and personal care from sons, daughters, and daughters-in-law on the depressive symptoms of older adults in rural China. The sample derived from rural Anhui Province, a region with a strong hierarchy of support preferences that leads with sons and their…
Descriptors: Daughters, Foreign Countries, Depression (Psychology), Family (Sociological Unit)
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Diekmann, Andreas; Schmidheiny, Kurt – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2004
Using data from the June 1980 Current Population Survey, Morgan, Lye, and Condran 1988 reported that families with a daughter have a higher divorce risk than families with a son. They attribute this finding to the higher involvement of fathers in raising a son, which in turn promotes marital stability. We investigate the relation between gender…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sons, Daughters, Divorce
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Yu, Wei-Hsin; Su, Kuo-Hsien – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
This study examines how sibship characteristics affect educational attainment in Taiwan. Using a multilevel analysis of a sibling sample of 12,715 observations from 3,001 families drawn from a national survey, we investigate the effects of family size, sibship density, birth-order rank, and sibship gender composition. The results support the…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Foreign Countries, Siblings, National Surveys