Later Life Moves and Movers in Germany: An Expanded Typology

In times of ageing baby boomer cohorts and increasing regional disparities, residential choice in later life is important regarding family relations and the provision of social services. In this study, a new typology of later life moves is developed based on observed patterns and characteristics of...

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Main Author: Tim Winke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Federal Institute for Population Research 2017-02-01
Series:Comparative Population Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.comparativepopulationstudies.de/index.php/CPoS/article/view/205
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spelling doaj-b5cb81a8416d4453b9f6645e19a9cfaa2021-08-02T08:41:21ZengFederal Institute for Population ResearchComparative Population Studies1869-89801869-89992017-02-01420130Later Life Moves and Movers in Germany: An Expanded TypologyTim Winke0Berlin Graduate School of Social Sciences (BGSS), Humboldt Universität zu BerlinIn times of ageing baby boomer cohorts and increasing regional disparities, residential choice in later life is important regarding family relations and the provision of social services. In this study, a new typology of later life moves is developed based on observed patterns and characteristics of residential changes. For this purpose, the German Socio-Economic Panel data has been linked to uniquely detailed neighbourhood information to study how aspects of both later life movers and moves are structured. The results suggest four types of moves, namely: residential improvement, family, residential adaptation and care moves. The typology expands rigid classifications based on age, health status or distance moved, and highlights intergenerational family ties, housing concerns and fragmented forms of partnership as key aspects. Family moves to one’s children are associated with the existence of grandchildren, showing that elderly people take on roles as both care-takers and care-providers. The residential consequences of being widowed or divorced are socially stratified and can lead to residential and economic instability.http://www.comparativepopulationstudies.de/index.php/CPoS/article/view/205Later life migrationResidential mobilityLife courseGermanyNon-negative matrix factorisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tim Winke
spellingShingle Tim Winke
Later Life Moves and Movers in Germany: An Expanded Typology
Comparative Population Studies
Later life migration
Residential mobility
Life course
Germany
Non-negative matrix factorisation
author_facet Tim Winke
author_sort Tim Winke
title Later Life Moves and Movers in Germany: An Expanded Typology
title_short Later Life Moves and Movers in Germany: An Expanded Typology
title_full Later Life Moves and Movers in Germany: An Expanded Typology
title_fullStr Later Life Moves and Movers in Germany: An Expanded Typology
title_full_unstemmed Later Life Moves and Movers in Germany: An Expanded Typology
title_sort later life moves and movers in germany: an expanded typology
publisher Federal Institute for Population Research
series Comparative Population Studies
issn 1869-8980
1869-8999
publishDate 2017-02-01
description In times of ageing baby boomer cohorts and increasing regional disparities, residential choice in later life is important regarding family relations and the provision of social services. In this study, a new typology of later life moves is developed based on observed patterns and characteristics of residential changes. For this purpose, the German Socio-Economic Panel data has been linked to uniquely detailed neighbourhood information to study how aspects of both later life movers and moves are structured. The results suggest four types of moves, namely: residential improvement, family, residential adaptation and care moves. The typology expands rigid classifications based on age, health status or distance moved, and highlights intergenerational family ties, housing concerns and fragmented forms of partnership as key aspects. Family moves to one’s children are associated with the existence of grandchildren, showing that elderly people take on roles as both care-takers and care-providers. The residential consequences of being widowed or divorced are socially stratified and can lead to residential and economic instability.
topic Later life migration
Residential mobility
Life course
Germany
Non-negative matrix factorisation
url http://www.comparativepopulationstudies.de/index.php/CPoS/article/view/205
work_keys_str_mv AT timwinke laterlifemovesandmoversingermanyanexpandedtypology
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