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Books and Reports: The Family, The Market Or The State? Intergenerational Support Under Pressure In Ageing Societies
This book, edited by Gustavo de Santis, touches upon a few of the major challenges that all modern societies will have to face in the near future: how to set up a resilient pay-as-you-go pension system; whether the current balance between expenses and revenues in social expenditure is viable in the future, and, if not, what changes need to be introduced; whether the relative well-being of the current and future cohorts of the old will be preserved, and how their standards of living compare to those experienced by the old in the recent past.
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Books and Reports: Fatherhood In Late Modernity – Cultural Images, Social Practices, Structural Frames
This book, edited by Mechtild Oechsle, Ursula Müller and Sabine Hess, investigates the relationship between cultural representations and social practices of fatherhood. The contributions from different countries and scientific disciplines analyse the existing varieties of fatherhood. They look at social backgrounds, organisational influences, as well as the impact of political and legal interventions.
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Books and Reports: Families And Family Policies
This book, edited by Chiara Saraceno, Jane Lewis, and Arnlaug Leira, is a collection of 51 papers dealing with family policies of the past 69 years. The first volume of the book addresses the origins and social foundations as well as the main actors and drives of family policies. It touches upon themes such as gender, intergenerational obligations and care. The second volume focuses on the goals addressed by family policies as well as on geographical differences.
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Books and Reports: Study "Strong Children - Strong Family"
The Robert Bosch Stiftung presents the study "Starke Kinder - Starke Familie" (in German) on the well-being of children in cities and communities. This study shows how municipalities can support and boost the quality of life, development opportunities, and social participation of children. Making children “strong” in this sense requires a joint effort by families, civil initiatives, businesses and government agencies that also involves the children themselves.
Kulu
Hill
Migration and Integration
Family and Children
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Discussion Paper No. 1: Perspectives of Policy-Relevant Population Studies (2012)
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This document highlights some of the emerging issues in policy-relevant population research in light of the fundamental demographic developments of our times. It sets an agenda of the most urgent topics and most exciting approaches in the field of policy-relevant population studies. The four sections of the document introduce and elaborate on main thematic fields of demographic research. In these, we handle the most relevant topics and enquiries on population dynamics that impact mar­kets, society, and policies today and in the near future.
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Live and Learn
As birth rates fall and many populations shrink across the developing world, governments want to know why their citizens are choosing to have fewer children. The thinking goes that if the obstacles preventing people from having children are removed, then families (and populations) will grow. But a study by Maria Iacovou and Lara Patr?cio Tavares shows that people in the UK don't necessarily have fewer kids than expected because they are economically, socially or even biologically constrained, it's often because they simply change their minds.
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Potenciales destructores de empleo
El incremento del número de niños que viven por debajo del umbral de pobreza se ha convertido en una preocupación para la mayoría de los países europeos. Este riesgo es especialmente elevado para las familias monoparentales y para las familias en las que ambos padres se encuentran desempleados. Sin embargo, poco se sabe sobre la relación opuesta: ¿aumenta el riesgo de desempleo para ambos miembros de la pareja al tener hijos? En un reciente estudio, Juho Härkönen explora esta cuestión y el papel que en ella desempeñan las medidas políticas.
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Potenciales destructores de empleo
Increasing rates of children living below the poverty line have become a concern for most European countries. This risk is especially high for single-parent families and for families where both parents are jobless. However, little is known about the opposite relation: Does having children increase the risk that neither partner of a couple works? In a recent study, Juho Härkönen explores this question and the role of policies.
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Potenciales destructores de empleo
Le nombre croissant d’enfants vivant en-dessous du seuil de pauvreté est devenu une préoccupation pour la plupart des pays européens. Ce risque est particulièrement élevé pour les familles monoparentales et pour les familles dont les deux parents sont sans emploi. Toutefois, on en sait peu sur la relation inverse : le fait d’avoir des enfants augmente-t-il le risque de chômage chez les deux parents ? Dans le cadre de ces recherches, Juho Härkönen explore cette question ainsi que l’impact des mesures politiques sur cette relation.
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