Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 January 2009
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27 The employment patterns of older men in the mines should be interpreted with caution. It is possible that their former occupations were recorded rather than their current occupational status. The extent of labour force participation by elderly men in Brinsley therefore, may be exaggerated. Continuation of work among framework knitters is less problematic. There is ample evidence that men continued as framework knitters until they died or were incapacitated. See, for example, P.P. 1984, vol. xv, Appendix to report of the commissioner appointed to inquire into the condition of the framework knitters 22–3Google Scholar. This appendix describes by name and age the extent and type of participation in framework knitting by members of eight families in Arnold. Of the eight, three households were headed by knitters who were over 60 years old, and one was headed by a knitter in his fifties. Because of the possibility that unemployment was underreported in Brinsley, these data probably underestimate the differences in the employment opportunities of older men in the three villages.
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41 D. S. Smith found that marital status, followed by employment status and then age predicted whether an older man was head of his household. Smith, , ‘Life course, norms, and the family system’, 289.Google Scholar As with the American census, there is no clear interpretation of what being head of household meant. However, as Smith argues for the American case, headship in Britain appears to have correlates (with age, sex, marital status, and employment status, for example), suggesting that being head of household had a cultural meaning during the nineteenth century.
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46 Brenner, and Laslett, , Sociology from crisis to science? 117.Google Scholar They stress that there is no necessary relationship between the family and social reproduction. Non-familial resources may be totally or partially responsible for social reproduction. The community or the state, for example, may provide some or all of the services for children or the infirm. How the responsibilities for social reproduction are allocated in different cultural and historical contexts becomes the focus of analysis.
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