Going solo: lifelong nonparticipation amongst the NCDS cohort
Going solo: lifelong nonparticipation amongst the NCDS cohort
Some Western societies, it has been claimed, are experiencing an unparalleled downward trend in participation with manifold grave consequences predicted. In the UK, for instance, politicians and commentators, arguably influenced by Robert Putnam’s warnings of a collapse in community, have spoken of Britain’s broken society and disintegrating social ties with opting out, or nonparticipation, presented as a pressing social problem. Set against this background, and engaging directly with Putnam’s thesis, we explore the scale, characteristics and causes of an ‘extreme’ variant of nonparticipation - lifelong nonparticipation – amongst members of a national birth cohort, the UK’s National Child Development Study (NCDS) (1958). Joining structured survey data collected over the lifecourse, with biographical interview data collected from cohort members at age 50, we identify lifelong nonparticipation as a minority disposition associated with distinctive demographic traits being, for example, highly gendered and related to lower educational attainment. In terms of causes, time pressures arising from work and caring duties or, more precisely, the feeling of being ‘pressed for time’, appeared critical. The implications for policy and practice are considered.
547-560
Brookfield, Katherine
90c2a413-4469-4aad-bdc0-b87bff805a86
Parry, Jane
c7061194-16cb-434e-bf05-914623cfcc63
Bolton, Vicki
2d08041f-7eae-4b6f-ba0a-a19acebc02b3
Brookfield, Katherine
90c2a413-4469-4aad-bdc0-b87bff805a86
Parry, Jane
c7061194-16cb-434e-bf05-914623cfcc63
Bolton, Vicki
2d08041f-7eae-4b6f-ba0a-a19acebc02b3
Brookfield, Katherine, Parry, Jane and Bolton, Vicki
(2018)
Going solo: lifelong nonparticipation amongst the NCDS cohort.
Leisure Studies, 37 (5), .
(doi:10.1080/02614367.2018.1514527).
Abstract
Some Western societies, it has been claimed, are experiencing an unparalleled downward trend in participation with manifold grave consequences predicted. In the UK, for instance, politicians and commentators, arguably influenced by Robert Putnam’s warnings of a collapse in community, have spoken of Britain’s broken society and disintegrating social ties with opting out, or nonparticipation, presented as a pressing social problem. Set against this background, and engaging directly with Putnam’s thesis, we explore the scale, characteristics and causes of an ‘extreme’ variant of nonparticipation - lifelong nonparticipation – amongst members of a national birth cohort, the UK’s National Child Development Study (NCDS) (1958). Joining structured survey data collected over the lifecourse, with biographical interview data collected from cohort members at age 50, we identify lifelong nonparticipation as a minority disposition associated with distinctive demographic traits being, for example, highly gendered and related to lower educational attainment. In terms of causes, time pressures arising from work and caring duties or, more precisely, the feeling of being ‘pressed for time’, appeared critical. The implications for policy and practice are considered.
Text
16_01_2020_Going solo
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 9 August 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 September 2018
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 437063
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/437063
ISSN: 0261-4367
PURE UUID: a948817d-320a-4186-9ee3-fd8467ca345a
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 16 Jan 2020 17:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:21
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Katherine Brookfield
Author:
Vicki Bolton
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics