Patterns of family salience and welfare state regimes: sociability practices and support norms in a comparative perspective

TitrePatterns of family salience and welfare state regimes: sociability practices and support norms in a comparative perspective
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuteursGanjour, O, Widmer, E
JournalEuropean Societies
Volume18
Ticket3
Nombre3
Pagination201-220
Date Publishedapr
Mots-clésdefamilization, family, patterns of sociability practices, patterns of solidarity norms, welfare state regimes
Résumé

This research explores patterns of family salience based on sociability and solidarity norms according to the institutional context. The data come from the International Social Survey Program (ISSP), from respondents living in four types of welfare regime countries: Mediterranean, corporatist, liberal, and social-democratic. Based on cluster analyses, we found that the salience of family in sociability practices and solidarity norms to a significant extent varies according to welfare regimes. Individuals from a Mediterranean welfare regime more often develop a pattern of sociability by a focus on children or parents. Normatively, they develop a pattern stressing the salience of both family and state. Individuals from a corporatist welfare regime more often develop a pattern of sociability focused on extended kin or feature a lack of sociability. At the normative level, they promote either the patterns of state support or reliance on the self. Individuals from a liberal welfare regime stress patterns of family support or self-reliance at the normative level. They develop a pattern of associational activity or show a lack of sociability. Individuals from social-democratic welfare regimes are more frequently normatively oriented toward state support while promoting participation in associations or showing a lack in their sociability.

URLhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616696.2016.1158846
DOI10.1080/14616696.2016.1158846
Refereed DesignationRefereed