Volume 52 - Article 25 | Pages 849–868  

Sociodemographic variation in family structures and geographic proximity between adult children and parents in Europe

By Saverio Minardi

Abstract

Background: Family structures shape caregiving dynamics and are considered key drivers of inequality. While research often focuses on partners and children, recent studies highlight the role of grandparents and parents of adult children in shaping informal labor demands. However, sociodemographic differences in multigenerational structures remain understudied. Most research focuses on multigenerational coresidence, despite evidence that geographic proximity alone is often sufficient to enable multigenerational support.

Objective: This study explores age variation in multigenerational family structures, defined by the intersection of partnership status, parenthood, and adults’ geographic proximity to their parents. It examines differences across gender, socioeconomic background, migration status, and welfare regimes in Europe between 2020 and 2022.

Methods: Using the 10th wave of the European Social Survey, the age prevalence of family structures across groups is investigated through multinomial logistic regression.

Results: Analysis reveals variation in the age distribution of multigenerational structures across all groups. At younger ages, lower socioeconomic background (SES) individuals are more likely to live in multigenerational structures, while higher SES individuals tend to delay parenthood and migrate, increasing their likelihood of parenting without nearby parents at older ages. Migrants face the greatest risk of parenthood without parents nearby. Welfare regime differences align with the fertility and social support patterns of each regime.

Contribution: This study emphasizes the importance of considering relationships beyond the household when analyzing family structures and their implications. It highlights sociodemographic variations in multigenerational structures, which can influence the informal labor demands associated with different nuclear family arrangements and contribute to inequalities.

Author’s Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

Birth month and adult lifespan: A within-family, cohort, and spatial examination using FamiLinx data in the United States (1700–1899)
Volume 49 - Article 9

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research

Uncovering what matters: Family life-course aspects and personal wealth in late working age
Volume 52 - Article 22    | Keywords: family dynamics, feature selection, life course, social stratification, wealth

The constellations of child fostering in Kenya: Considering location and distance
Volume 52 - Article 9    | Keywords: child fostering, distance, kin networks, kinship, living arrangements, location data, motherhood

The formal demography of kinship VI: Demographic stochasticity and variance in the kinship network
Volume 51 - Article 39    | Keywords: dependency ratios, kinship, matrix models, multitype branching processes, prevalence, stochastic models

The formal demography of kinship V: Kin loss, bereavement, and causes of death
Volume 49 - Article 41    | Keywords: bereavement, causes of death, competing risks, kin loss, kinship, matrix models

The sex preference for children in Europe: Children’s sex and the probability and timing of births
Volume 48 - Article 8    | Keywords: Europe, family structure, fertility, gender, progression rate, sex, sex composition, son preference

Cited References: 69

Download to Citation Manager

PubMed

Google Scholar

Volume
Page
Volume
Article ID