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Subject

Intergenerational Contact and Financial Support Between Parents and Married Children : Children's Gender and Birth Order as Correlates
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기혼자녀의 성과 출생순위가 부모와의 접촉과 경제적지지에 미치는 영향

논문 기본 정보

Type
Academic journal
Author
Heejeong Choi (Sungkyunkwan University) Bokyoung Bin (Sungkyunkwan University)
Journal
Association of Families and Better Life Journal of Families and Better Life Vol.34 No.2 (Wn.140) KCI Accredited Journals
Published
2016.4
Pages
15 - 27 (13page)

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Intergenerational Contact and Financial Support Between Parents and Married Children : Children's Gender and Birth Order as Correlates
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Abstract· Keywords

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This study examined intergenerational contact and financial support exchange between parents and each of their non-coresident married children. Prior qualitative work has suggested that increased contact between parents and their married daughters may indicate a decline in patrilineal norms in contemporary Korean families. Using a nationally representative sample, this study investigated if married daughters engage in similar levels of intergenerational contact and financial support exchange with their parents in contrast to their married brothers (first-born sons in particular). The data were drawn from the first wave of the Korean Longitudinal Study of Ageing (KLoSA, 2006). For analyses, individuals who had at least one non-coresident married child were selected, resulting in the analytic sample of 3,950 parents with 10,947 non-coresident married children. Both regression with robust standard errors and sibling fixed effects regression models were estimated using the reg and xtreg procedures in STATA. Residential proximity and sociodemographic characteristics of both parents and children were controlled in analyses. Findings suggest that, overall, parents report more frequent face-to-face contact with and financial support from their first-born sons in comparison to other sons and daughters. Daughters, on the other hand, were found to engage in more frequent contact via phone call, mail, or email with their parents. In conclusion, we did not find a strong evidence to support the contention that patrilineal norms have softened in contemporary Korean families to the extent that has been suggested in qualitative studies.

Contents

〈Abstract〉
Ⅰ. 서론
Ⅱ. 선행연구 고찰
Ⅲ. 연구방법
Ⅳ. 연구결과
Ⅴ. 논의 및 결론
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UCI(KEPA) : I410-ECN-0101-2016-594-002899467