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Family and Economic Growth: A World-System Approach and a Cross-National Analysis

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Family and Economic Growth: A World-System Approach and a Cross-National Analysis
Author(s)Kick, Edward L.; Davis, Byron L.; Lehtinen, M.; Wang, L.
AbstractFamily research in sociology has concentrated on the national-level determinants of family structure and process. The approach we propose, in contrast, reverses the causal ordering to consider the effects of family characteristics on national outcomes, especially economic growth. This effort is further stimulated by neglect in the sociology of national development literature, where the plausible impact of the family on economic development has been ignored. The modified world-system perspective that we present links the institution of the family to modernization and the developmental profile of nations. The authors use cross-national data to test this perspective and demonstrate that the family is a vital, but differential contributor to national development around the world.
IssueNo2
Pages225-244
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceComparative Sociology
VolumeNo41
PubDateApril 2000
ISBN_ISSN1569-1322

Family and Kinship

  • Ascription and Social Identity
  • Capitalism / Westernization
  • Child-Bearing
  • Comparative Kinship
  • Demographic Trends and Policy
  • Domestic Violence
  • Evolution of the Family / Family Structure
  • Family, Race, and Nation
  • Gender Inequality
  • Gender, Work, and Family
  • Globalization
  • Marriage
  • Modernization and Family Change
  • Social Context / Social Policy
  • Well-Being and Family


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