Projecten per jaar
Samenvatting
When long-distance couples start living together, the decision about where to co-reside has important repercussions, as long-distance moves often lead to the loss of local ties. Drawing on Danish population register data on long-distance opposite-sex couples and cross-classified multi-level statistical analyses, we explore each partner's share in the total distance moved at the start of their co-residence. We examine the influence of local ties to family and gender asymmetries. Our findings indicate that women tend to bridge the larger share of the distance when moving into co-residence. Living close to non-resident children, parents or siblings and having resident children lower one's share in the total distance moved. Men's local ties to non-resident family have more influence than women's, while women's resident children seem to exert more influence. Our results suggest that traditional gender patterns shape couples' decision-making about where to live together and who migrates the greater share of the distance.
Originele taal-2 | English |
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Tijdschrift | Population Space and Place |
DOI's | |
Status | E-pub ahead of print - 7-nov.-2022 |
Projecten
- 1 Actief
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Family ties that bind: A new view of internal migration, immobility and labour-market outcomes
Mulder, C. H., Venhorst, V., Gillespie, B., Palomares Linares, I., van der Wiel, R., Thomassen, J., Artamonova, A., Schnor, C., Zilincikova, Z., Thomas, M. & Reitsma, T.
01/09/2017 → 01/03/2024
Project: Research