Browse the Collection

RC Produced by Research Connections

* Peer Reviewed Journal

Current Filters: New in last 90 days [remove]; Full Text:no [remove]; Classification:Family, Friend, & Neighbor (Informal) [remove];

3 results found.
[1]  
Select Citation
Result Resource Type

*

Child care and child births: The role of grandparents in the Netherlands
Thomese, Fleur, April, 2013
Journal of Marriage and Family, 75(2), 403-421

A study of grandparent involvement in the care of young children and its relationship to subsequent child births in dual-earner families, based on data from 898 18- through 49-year-old Dutch men and women from the Netherlands' Kinship Panel Study

Reports & Papers


*

Grandparenting and childbearing in the extended family
Aassve, Arnstein, November, 2012
European Journal of Population, 28(4), 499-518

A study of the relationship between the role of grandparents' grandchild care provision and their adult children's childbearing behavior, and changes in that relationship for different configurations of extended families and age of the youngest grandchild, with an examination of differences across countries that differ in provision of formal child care availability, based on data from over 16,031 individuals aged 50 years or older from the Survey of Health, Aging and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) for eleven European countries

Reports & Papers


*

Motivations for providing and utilizing child care by grandmothers in South Korea
Lee, Jaerim, April, 2013
Journal of Marriage and Family, 75(2), 381-402

An examination of the motivations of grandmothers and mothers to provide and utilize child care, based on data from 21 matched pairs of employed mothers and grandmothers who are caregivers in Korea

Reports & Papers


Select Citation
[1]  

Search Feedback


 



Research Connections is supported by grant #90YE0104 from the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents are solely the responsibility of the National Center for Children in Poverty and the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, the Administration for Children and Families, or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Google Translate