Intergenerational coresidence of older adults in Japan: conditions for cultural plasticity.
@article{Takagi2007IntergenerationalCO,
title={Intergenerational coresidence of older adults in Japan: conditions for cultural plasticity.},
author={Emiko Takagi and Merril Silverstein and Eileen M. Crimmins},
journal={The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences},
year={2007},
volume={62 5},
pages={
S330-9
}
}OBJECTIVES
This study investigated individual-level conditions and prefecture-level contextual factors that enable and/or restrict intergenerational coresidence arrangements between older parents and adult children.
METHODS
We implemented multinomial logistic regression within a hierarchical approach to compare traditional and nontraditional styles of intergenerational coresidence arrangements. Individual data (N = 3,565) came from the Nihon University Japanese Longitudinal Study of Aging. We…
58 Citations
Families in Asia: A Cross-National Comparison of Intergenerational Co-residence
- Economics
- 2013
We examine patterns and trends in household size and living arrangements in Asia to highlight the prevalent characteristics of Asian families showing diversity across countries and changes over time.…
Intergenerational cohabitation in modern Indonesia: filial support and dependence.
- MedicineHealth economics
- 2011
It is found that, while parental needs are important, cohabitation is influenced to a larger extent by the costs and gains of children.
Title : Reciprocity in the Formation of Intergenerational Coresidence
- Psychology
- 2014
Children play a key role in supporting elderly parents, and the literature has consistently found reciprocity whereby parents compensate their children for providing care and attention. To understand…
Reciprocity in the Formation of Intergenerational Coresidence
- Psychology
- 2015
Children play a key role in supporting elderly parents, and the literature has consistently found reciprocity whereby parents compensate their children for providing care and attention. To understand…
Health and marital status of older Chinese couples and implications for intergenerational co-residence
- PsychologyAgeing and Society
- 2020
Abstract Older individuals who are in poor health or who lack spousal support are in many ways vulnerable in contemporary China. Declines in family size, combined with improvements in life expectancy…
Strengthening or Weakening? The Impact of Universal Health Insurance on Intergenerational Coresidence in Taiwan
- MedicineDemography
- 2015
Although NHI on average reduces the probability that elderly parents live with their adult children by approximately 6.6 %, the likelihood of intergenerational coresidence increases among families benefiting most from NHI, such as those with unhealthy elderly mothers and fewer children.
A Vignette Study of Older Adults’ Preferences for Intergenerational Transfers in the Context of Competition Between Grandparents and Grandchildren in Rural China
- EducationThe journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences
- 2019
Findings support the altruistic perspective on filial support and the corporate group/mutual aid model of family functioning, within the family system that differentiates patrilineal from matrilineals lines of descent.
Older Parents’ Loneliness and Family Relationships in Japan
- Psychology
- 2015
This study investigated how Japanese older adults’ feelings of loneliness are related to structural, associational, and functional dimensions of intergenerational family relationships as well as to…
A comparative analysis of intergenerational relations in East Asia
- Economics
- 2013
Due to rapid aging of populations in East Asia, intergenerational relations are changing. This study examines these changes in four East Asian societies, chosen for their shared cultural background…
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 70 REFERENCES
Intergenerational Coresidence of the Japanese Elderly
- Psychology
- 2006
Relatively high prevalence of coresidence between older parents and adult children in Japan is generally interpreted as a structural manifestation of traditional family norms; however, recent…
Family Values and Coresidence with Married Children in Urban China
- Psychology
- 1999
The high level of coresidence of parents with married children in China, as in much of East Asia, is generally understood as a manifestation of the persistence of traditional family values in this…
Patrilineal coresidence in urban China: a life course perspective
- Economics
- 2005
In this paper, we model histories of coresidence between two cohorts of urban Chinese couples, married during the Cultural Revolution and early market reform periods. Most research on coresidence…
Filial Piety and Intergenerational Solidarity in Japan
- Education
- 1996
The Confucian norm of filial piety is generally assumed as an underlying ideology of the traditional living arrangement of the Japanese elderly, ie., patri-lineal, patrt-local stem family. In this…
Transitions in living arrangements among elders in Japan: does health make a difference?
- MedicineThe journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences
- 2002
Physical and mental health conditions were found to exert both direct and indirect effects on transitions in living arrangements, and poor health does trigger changes in living arrangement.
Changing Family Tradition: Housing Choices and Constraints for Older People in Japan
- Economics
- 2000
The primary objective of this paper is to provide a qualitative analysis of the transformations in the housing choices and living arrangements of older people in Japan. The underlying causes and…
Negotiating Family Support? The ‘Generational Contract’ between long-term Care and Inheritance
- SociologyJournal of Social Policy
- 2004
Using qualitative interviews with 54 older people, this article explores the changing patterns of the ‘generational contract’ in contemporary Britain and Japan. In particular, this article presents a…
Co‐residency living arrangement as a factor to facilitate labor force participation of Japanese women: community level analyses of Japanese families
- Sociology
- 2002
Significant regional variations by prefecture level exist for the family and the elderly in Japan. This suggests that the Japanese family, and aging society as well, must be studied carefully with…
The Impact of Modernisation and Social Policy on Family Care for Older People in Japan
- Political ScienceJournal of Social Policy
- 2000
In Japan the ideology of familism has reproduced patriarchal family values. It successfully retained family centred welfare provision and gender inequality in informal care work, and ensured formal…
Living arrangements of elderly Japanese and attitudes toward inheritance.
- EducationJournal of gerontology
- 1992
Using data from the 1988 Mainichi Newspaper/Nihon University National Family Survey, log-linear modeling of inheritance attitudes shows that living with married children, lower educational attainment, and living in a traditionally agricultural area are associated with favoring bequests to eldest sons, as opposed to bequesting to all children equally or to whoever takes care of the elderly person.




