The Japanese Family System: Change, Continuity, and Regionality in the Long Twentieth Century
In: SpringerBriefs in Population Studies
Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- 1 Background and Questions -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 High Economic Growth, Population Migration, and the Proliferation of Nuclear Family Households -- 1.3 Re-examining the Family Nuclearization Theory -- 1.4 Questioning the Gender Revolution Theory -- 1.5 About This Book -- References -- 2 Change and Continuity in the Stem Family -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 The National Family Research of Japan Special Survey 2001 -- 2.3 Intergenerational Co-residence Across the Life Course -- 2.3.1 Neolocal Residence at Marriage -- 2.3.2 Delayed Co-residence After Marriage -- 2.4 Theoretical Background and Analytical Approach -- 2.4.1 Conjugal Family Ideology -- 2.4.2 Industrialization and Urbanization -- 2.4.3 Intergenerational Transfer of Family Property and Reciprocity -- 2.4.4 Discrete-Time Logistic Regression Models for Intergenerational Co-residence -- 2.5 Factors Affecting Patrilocal Co-residence -- 2.5.1 Love Marriage and Private Domesticity Separated from Community -- 2.5.2 Employment Status and Educational Attainment -- 2.5.3 Size of City of Residence -- 2.5.4 Home Ownership and Intergenerational Transfer and Support -- 2.5.5 Period Effect and Regional Variation -- 2.6 Factors Affecting Matrilocal Co-residence -- References -- 3 Change and Continuity in the Gender Division of Labor -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 M-Shaped Employment Pattern Across the Life Course -- 3.3 Theoretical Background and Analytical Approach -- 3.3.1 Causal Forces Forming the M-Shaped Employment Pattern -- 3.3.2 Incompatibility Between Child-Rearing and Full-Time Paid Work -- 3.3.3 Intergenerational Co-residence, Proximate Residence, and Support -- 3.3.4 Socioeconomic Status -- 3.3.5 Other Background Factors -- 3.3.6 Discrete-Time Logistic Regression Models for Leaving and Re-entering the Labor Force.