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A life-course approach to co-residence in the Netherlands, 1850–1940

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2010

JAN KOK
Affiliation:
Virtual Knowledge Studio for the Humanities and Social Sciences, Amsterdam, and Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium).
KEES MANDEMAKERS
Affiliation:
International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam, and Erasmus University, Rotterdam.

Abstract

In this article, we study variations in co-residence with kin in the Netherlands in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. We use the reconstructed life courses of 17,527 individuals derived from the Historical Sample of the Netherlands (HSN) database. The life-course approach allows us to look at co-residence from the perspectives of both the receiving households and the co-resident kin. What made households take in relatives and do we find a preference for one type of relative over another? What was the background of people who decided to co-reside in another household? How important were family-related ‘altruistic’ motives compared with economic ones? The outcomes suggest the predominance of altruistic motives for co-residence, apart from persistent inheritance customs in the eastern part of the country.

La corésidence aux pays-bas, à partir des cours de vie (1850–1940)

Nous étudions dans cet article comment ont varié les corésidences avec les personnes apparentées au Pays-Bas de la mi-19e siècle à la mi-20e siècle. Nous avons eu recours à la reconstitution des cours de vie de 17 527 individus à partir de la banque de données par sondage de la population historique des Pays-Bas. Une telle approche nous a permis d'analyser les corésidences tant du point de vue des ménages hébergeant que de celui des personnes apparentées co-résidentes. Pour quelle raison des ménages hébergeaient-ils des membres de la parentèle? Y eut-il une préférence pour tel ou tel type de personne apparentée? Qu'y avait-il derrière la décision, chez certaines gens, de corésider au sein d'un autre ménage? Quelle importance revêtaient les motifs ‘altruistes’ – dans le cadre de la famille – par rapport aux motifs d'ordre économique familial? Les résultats de notre enquête donnent à penser que les motifs altruistes de corésidence ont prédominé, sauf à considérer, pour la partie Est du pays, des pratiques d'héritage persistantes.

Eine lebenslaufuntersuchung der koresidenz von verwandten in den niederlanden, 1850–1940

In diesem Beitrag untersuchen wir Unterschiede im Zusammenleben mit Verwandten (Koresidenz) in den Niederlanden im späten 19. und frühen 20. Jahrhundert. Wir bedienen uns dabei der rekonstruierten Lebensläufe von 17.527 Personen, die aus der Historischen Stichprobe der Niederlande gewonnen wurden. Die Lebenslaufuntersuchung erlaubt es uns, Koresidenz sowohl aus der Perspektive der aufnehmenden Haushalte als auch der mitwohnenden Verwandten zu betrachten. Was führte dazu, dass Haushalte Verwandte aufnahmen, und gab es Präferenzen für bestimmte Verwandte gegenüber anderen? Vor welchem Hintergrund entschieden sich Leute, in einem fremden Haushalt mit anderen zusammenzuleben? Wie wichtig waren familienbezogene, ‘altruistische’ Motive im Vergleich zu solchen der Familienwirtschaft? Die Ergebnisse legen den Schluss nahe, dass Koresidenz hauptsächlich auf altruistische Motive zurückzuführen ist, abgesehen von hartnäckigen Vererbungsbräuchen im östlichen Teil der Niederlande.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2010

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References

ENDNOTES

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