Volume 36 - Article 62 | Pages 1889–1916
The timing of parenthood and its effect on social contact and support
By Jesper Rözer, Anne-Rigt Poortman, Gerald Mollenhorst
Abstract
Objective: The objective of this study is to investigate how the timing of parenthood affects social contacts and support.
Methods: Fixed effects models on 12 waves of the Swiss Household Panel (1999−2010) are used to analyse how social relationships with relatives, friends, and neighbours change after people have children and how these changes depend on the timing of parenthood.
Results: The models show that parenthood increases contact with neighbours and decreases contact with friends. However, there are differences based on whether parenthood is early, on time, or late, and based on gender. The earlier men and women have children, the harder it is to keep in contact with friends and to establish contact with neighbours. Later in life the differences between early, ‘on-time’, and late parents tend to decline, except for contact with friends, for fathers.
Conclusions: We conclude that the timing of parenthood has a substantial impact on how people’s social networks change, especially shortly after they become parents.
Contribution: With this study, we show that the timing of parenthood moderates people’s network changes after they become parents.
Author's Affiliation
- Jesper Rözer - Universiteit van Amsterdam, the Netherlands EMAIL
- Anne-Rigt Poortman - Universiteit Utrecht, the Netherlands EMAIL
- Gerald Mollenhorst - Universiteit Utrecht, the Netherlands EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Joint lifestyles and the risk of union dissolution: Differences between marriage and cohabitation
Volume 39 - Article 15
Editorial for Special Collection on New Relationships from a Comparative Perspective
Volume 37 - Article 2
Why do intimate partners live apart? Evidence on LAT relationships across Europe
Volume 32 - Article 8
Income pooling strategies among cohabiting and married couples: A comparative perspective
Volume 30 - Article 55
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Higher incomes are increasingly associated with higher fertility: Evidence from the Netherlands, 2008–2022
Volume 51 - Article 26
| Keywords:
fertility,
income,
inequalities,
Netherlands,
parenthood
KINMATRIX: A new data resource for studies of families and kinship
Volume 51 - Article 25
| Keywords:
family,
networks,
solidarity,
survey methodology,
transmission
Between money and intimacy: Brideprice, marriage, and women’s position in contemporary China
Volume 50 - Article 46
| Keywords:
brideprice,
China,
divorce,
family,
family law,
gender inequalities,
marriage
Pathways and obstacles to parenthood among women in same-sex couples in Spain
Volume 50 - Article 35
| Keywords:
assisted reproduction,
family,
fertility desires,
LGBTQ,
parenthood,
same-sex couples
Losing the female survival advantage: Sex differentials in infant and child mortality in Pakistan
Volume 50 - Article 15
| Keywords:
child mortality,
family,
gender discrimination,
Pakistan,
sex differentials,
son preference,
South Asia,
survival analysis
Cited References: 59
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar