Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jan 26, 2022 · Abstract. Movement between sequentially-held roles—role transition—has long attracted scholars' attention for its ubiquity and importance in people’s work- and non-work lives. In our integrative review of 313 cross-discipline empirical articles, we find that the transitions attributes defined by Ebaugh (1988) and Ashforth (2001), the ...

    • Mailys M. George, Sarah Wittman, Kevin W. Rockmann
    • 2021
  2. Schlossberg defined a transition as any event, or non-event that results in changed relationships, routines, assumptions, and roles. It is important to note that perception plays a key role in transitions as an event, or nonevent, - meets the definition of a transition only if it is so defined by the individual experiencing it. In

    • 21KB
    • 2
  3. People also ask

  4. A transition is a process over time and has no end point and includes phases of assimilation and continuous appraisal as people move in, through and out. 1. The first stage to transition can be perceived to be either: Moving in: moving into a new situation or circumstances – e.g.: moving away from home and starting university.

  5. Jul 27, 2016 · The basic idea is that individuals have various roles in life and that these roles come with prescriptions on how individuals should behave. Banton 1996 defines a role as “the expected behaviour associated with a social position” (p. 749, cited under General Overviews ).

    • Keywords
    • Abstract
    • Calendar year
    • 2.3. Theoretical Motivations
    • 4. CRITIQUES
    • 5. CONCLUSION
    • DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
    • Delia Baldassarri and Maria Abascal
    • Xi Song and Cameron D. Campbell
    • Jeremy Freese and David Peterson
    • Keith N. Hampton
    • Political and Economic Sociology
    • Differentiation and Stratification
    • Thurston Domina, Andrew Penner, and Emily Penner
    • Julie R. Posselt and Eric Grodsky
    • Individual and Society
    • Angela R. Dixon and Edward E. Telles
    • Demography
    • Urban and Rural Community Sociology
    • Victor M. Rios, Nikita Carney, and Jasmine Kelekay
    • Policy

    demographic change, ideational change, family, fertility, marriage, cohabitation

    References to the second demographic transition (SDT) have increased dra-matically in the past two decades. The SDT predicts unilinear change to-ward very low fertility and a diversity of union and family types. The pri-mary driver of these changes is a powerful, inevitable, and irreversible shift in attitudes and norms in the direction of greater ...

    Figure 1 Peer-reviewed publications and Google Scholar citations mentioning the second demographic transition in their text (right axis) have increased over time. Google Scholar data (left axis), which includes books and reports, provide many more citations and show a similar, dramatic, upward climb. Specifically, the SDT clings to a problematic de...

    Van de Kaa and Lesthaeghe mention three arguments that convinced them that the SDT was truly different from the DT, a discontinuity anchored in an irreversible shift in motivation and sentiment. We discuss these in turn.

    The SDT has been challenged. We review a set of criticisms aimed at the SDT and offer some additional ones. We then focus on two important forces, gender change and globalization, largely ignored in the SDT.

    Ron Lesthaeghe and Dirk van de Kaa offered the SDT as a description of Western European, post–baby boom family and fertility patterns, a useful descriptive contribution. Key components were below replacement–level fertility and an increasing diversity of union types. They posited that attractive new ideas—postmodern ideas and attitudes—enabled and ...

    The authors are not aware of any affiliations, memberships, funding, or financial holdings that might be perceived as affecting the objectivity of this review.

    Genealogical Microdata and Their Significance for Social Science

    Network Sampling: From Snowball and Multiplicity to Respondent-Driven Sampling

    Studying the Digital: Directions and Challenges for Digital Methods

    Theorizing in Sociological Research: A New Perspective, a New Departure? Richard Swedberg

    The Demand Side of Hiring: Employers in the Labor Market David B. Bills, Valentina Di Stasio, and Klarita G ̈erxhani

    Categorical Inequality: Schools as Sorting Machines

    Gender Quotas for Legislatures and Corporate Boards

    Wealth Inequality and Accumulation Alexandra Killewald, Fabian T. Pfeffer, and Jared N. Schachner

    Skin Color and Colorism: Global Research, Concepts, and Measurement

    The Development of Transgender Studies in Sociology Kristen Schilt and Danya Lagos

    Social Structure, Adversity, Toxic Stress, and Intergenerational Poverty: An Early Childhood Model

    Ethnographies of Race, Crime, and Justice: Toward a Sociological Double-Consciousness

    Explicating Divided Approaches to Gentrification and Growing Income Inequality

    The Social Safety Net After Welfare Reform: Recent Developments and Consequences for Household Dynamics Laura Tach and Kathryn Edin

    • 376KB
    • 23
  6. Research on life transitions highlights the normative and nonnormative changes that individuals experience over time. During the past two decades, life course perspectives have provided a strategic context for studying the genesis of life transitions and their personal and social consequences.

  7. Feb 16, 2019 · Drawing on theories of life-course sociology and life-span psychology an integrated social-ecological developmental approach is presented, conceptualizing individual agency as a relational and intentional process that evolves through interactions with the wider socio-cultural context.

  1. People also search for