© 1999 - 2010
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Kinship, family and social network
The anthropological embedment of fertility change in Southern Europe

Services
Bookmark this page
Send this article to a friend
Download to Citation Manager
file RIS format
file BibTeX format
Citations and Similar Articles
PubMed
Articles by Giuseppe A. Micheli
Google Scholar
Articles by Giuseppe A. Micheli
Article and its Citations
 

Giuseppe A. Micheli

 
VOLUME 3 - ARTICLE 13
 
Date Received: 11 Apr 2000
Date Published: 19 Dec 2000

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol3/13/

doi:10.4054/DemRes.2000.3.13
   
PDF file Click the icon to view and/or download the PDF file.
Once you are in the PDF file, use your browser back button to return to this page.
HTML file Click the icon to view the HTML version of this article.
It will be displayed in a new window.

Abstract
There is considerable overlap between Le Play’s mid-eighteenth-century household model map and the regional TFR map of central-southern Europe in the 1980s. The author examines the overall structure of relationships involved in Le Play’s typology and observes that both the stem-family and the unstable family area in the Southern Europe are marked by a small, close-knit network of strong ties, with kinship predominance. Vice versa, the social support hinges upon a network of kin in the stem-family area, upon an alliance among different kindred units in the unstable Mediterranean area. All this leads to formulating a hypothesis of a tri-partite model for Western European relationship models. How can we explain the relationship between family predominance as anthropological embedding and family collapse as demographic reaction? The author reconsiders this question in the light of Festinger’s cognitive dissonance theory and Elder’s ‘principle of accentuation’: different, regionally rooted, family and kinship patterns "react" in contact with an appropriate reagent, such as the macro-process of modernisation, generating different patterns of today’s demographic behaviour.

Author's affiliation
Giuseppe A. Micheli
Catholic University Milan, Italy

Keywords
anthropological demography, family patterns, fertility change, Mediterranean Europe, social networks

Word count (Main text)
6723

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
file [21-16] Darwin and Lotka: Two Concepts of Population (social networks)
file [19-52] Indonesia against the trend? Ageing and inter-generational wealth flows in two Indonesian communities (anthropological demography)
file [19-11] Albania: Trends and patterns, proximate determinants and policies of fertility change (fertility change)
file [18-20] On the structural value of children and its implication on intended fertility in Bulgaria (social networks)
file [18-17] Global knowledge/local bodies: Family planning service providers’ interpretations of contraceptive knowledge(s) (anthropological demography)

[ Back to previous page ]