A delay in the transition to parenthood is common to all European countries, but Mediterranean and North European young people follow different pathways of transition to adulthood, which are described in the article. Since 2003, we have conducted four social inquiries in Italian urban contexts involving male and female young people with and without children and the article is therefore focused on Italy. The principal purpose of this research programme is to interpret the determinants of the Italian phenomenon of delaying the birth of the first child. The interpretative axes for conceptualizing the problem are intergender and intergenerational comparisons. In particular, the results of these inquiries indicate that in Italy the delay of the parenthood transition is linked to the policy-makers' 'delay' in realizing that the decision to postpone having children is not strongly linked to any 'crisis of family values'. The real problem is that since the beginning of the twentieth century, the present younger generation is the first to suffer from a general decrease in social opportunities as compared with the previous one. The mechanism is illustrated by Bourdieu: the new generation's members continue to form their life expectations on the basis of their parents' situations without considering the changes in conditions (e.g. inflation of study titles) that restrict their access to social resources. According to our results, the delay in the assumption of the parental role is an unintentional effect of a set of intentional actions aimed at creating and consolidating life conditions supporting self-realization. 'Delayers' continually try to resist the distressing sensations of precariousness, instability, vulnerability and uncertainty recognized by influential sociologists as distinctive features of contemporary life. Consequently, the delay in the family-building process takes on an active connotation: the attempt is to fill the gap in life chances related to gender and generational memberships. The last part of the article is dedicated to a comparison of European countries' social policies in support of parenthood. © 2010 University of Rome 'La Sapienza'.

The European delay in transition to parenthood: The Italian case / Mauceri, Sergio; Valentini, Alessia. - In: REVUE INTERNATIONALE DE SOCIOLOGIE. - ISSN 0390-6701. - STAMPA. - 20:1(2010), pp. 111-142. [10.1080/03906700903525743]

The European delay in transition to parenthood: The Italian case

MAUCERI, Sergio;VALENTINI, ALESSIA
2010

Abstract

A delay in the transition to parenthood is common to all European countries, but Mediterranean and North European young people follow different pathways of transition to adulthood, which are described in the article. Since 2003, we have conducted four social inquiries in Italian urban contexts involving male and female young people with and without children and the article is therefore focused on Italy. The principal purpose of this research programme is to interpret the determinants of the Italian phenomenon of delaying the birth of the first child. The interpretative axes for conceptualizing the problem are intergender and intergenerational comparisons. In particular, the results of these inquiries indicate that in Italy the delay of the parenthood transition is linked to the policy-makers' 'delay' in realizing that the decision to postpone having children is not strongly linked to any 'crisis of family values'. The real problem is that since the beginning of the twentieth century, the present younger generation is the first to suffer from a general decrease in social opportunities as compared with the previous one. The mechanism is illustrated by Bourdieu: the new generation's members continue to form their life expectations on the basis of their parents' situations without considering the changes in conditions (e.g. inflation of study titles) that restrict their access to social resources. According to our results, the delay in the assumption of the parental role is an unintentional effect of a set of intentional actions aimed at creating and consolidating life conditions supporting self-realization. 'Delayers' continually try to resist the distressing sensations of precariousness, instability, vulnerability and uncertainty recognized by influential sociologists as distinctive features of contemporary life. Consequently, the delay in the family-building process takes on an active connotation: the attempt is to fill the gap in life chances related to gender and generational memberships. The last part of the article is dedicated to a comparison of European countries' social policies in support of parenthood. © 2010 University of Rome 'La Sapienza'.
2010
adulthood; delay; inter-europe comparison; intergender comparison; intergenerational comparison; parenthood
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
The European delay in transition to parenthood: The Italian case / Mauceri, Sergio; Valentini, Alessia. - In: REVUE INTERNATIONALE DE SOCIOLOGIE. - ISSN 0390-6701. - STAMPA. - 20:1(2010), pp. 111-142. [10.1080/03906700903525743]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/364425
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