Shared Residence Among Parents Living Apart in Norway

2017 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 556-571 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ragni Hege Kitterød ◽  
Kenneth Aarskaug Wiik
Keyword(s):  
2009 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
John R. Hipp ◽  
Andrew J. Perrin

Prior studies have separately suggested the importance of physical distance or social distance effects for the creation of neighborhood ties. This project adopts a case study approach and simultaneously tests for propinquity and homophily effects on neighborhood ties by employing a full–network sample from a recently developed New Urbanist neighborhood within a mid–sized southern city. the authors find that physical distance reduces the likelihood of weak or strong ties forming, suggesting the importance of accounting for propinquity when estimating social tie formation. the authors simultaneously find that social distance along wealth reduces the likelihood of weak ties forming. Social distance on life course markers—age, marital status, and the presence of children—reduces the formation of weak ties. Consistent with the systemic model, each additional month of shared residence in the neighborhood increases both weak and strong ties. An important innovation is this study's ability to directly compare the effects of physical distance and social distance, placing them into equivalent units: a 10 percent increase in home value difference is equivalent to a 5.6 percent increase in physical distance.


2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 861-883 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma Fransson ◽  
Sara Brolin Låftman ◽  
Viveca Östberg ◽  
Anders Hjern ◽  
Malin Bergström

Author(s):  
Laura Tach

Families play a central role in the study of social mobility—they are units of analysis for measuring social class as well as settings that shape the intergenerational transmission of resources. The American family has undergone important changes since the mid-twentieth century. Divorce, nonmarital childbearing, and cohabitation increased dramatically. The rise in divorce and cohabitation made the family a less stable unit of socialization and led to a proliferation of step and blended family arrangements with complex configurations of residential and biological ties. As a result of these changes, less than half of children spend their entire childhood in an intact, two-biological parent household, and families are no longer defined solely by shared residence or biology. The instability and complexity of family life requires stratification scholars to rethink how they measure origin and destination class and to consider how parents in nontraditional families transmit class-specific resources to the next generation.


2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 104
Author(s):  
Ali Khalafi ◽  
Mohammad Roshan ◽  
Ebrahim Taghizadeh ◽  
Abbas Karimi

In Iranian law, only entities that can be said is similar to physical subtraction, iddah entity after revocable divorce. During the iddah, couples living together have some obligations, but not forced to lay in between. And in another, though, for fear the loss of his wife, is allowed to subtract the location of the shared residence. It must be said that this system is rational and human relations based on the wisdom of civilization is permissible insofar as it does not conflict with Islamic law. If intellectuals of today's society conclude that stipulated in the divorce decree was not rational and not in the interest of society must predict good strategies to restore them to life and as far as possible be required. Basically, physical subtraction is expected to act before divorce to assess at this time to prevent the occurrence of problems after divorce and couples come to life with stability.


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