The changing educational gradient in non-traditional attitudes toward family behaviour: a cross-national study
The changing educational gradient in non-traditional attitudes toward family behaviour: a cross-national study
Second Demographic Transition (SDT) theory highlights how secularisation and individualism disrupted traditional family behaviours, e.g., high fertility and lifelong universal marriage, in Western countries. While non-traditional family behaviours appeared in Nordic countries first, later diffusing to other regions, variations in approval across educational groups and historical time remain underexplored. This study examines approval levels towards non-traditional behaviours—voluntary childless-ness, nonmarital cohabitation, nonmarital childbearing, parental divorce with children under 12, and mothers working with children under 3—across sociopolitical regimes in Europe, education levels, and historical time. European Social Survey data (2006, 2018) from 21 countries revealed different approval depending on the family behaviour. Approval was widespread for nonmarital cohabitation, nonmarital childbearing, and mothers working, but voluntary childlessness and parental divorce were less accepted. Country differences were not always as predicted by SDT theory: Nordic countries showed the highest approval for all non-traditional family behaviours, followed by Southern Europe, while Western and Eastern Europe were more resistant. Approval of maternal employment and parental divorce varied by education, with higher approval among the highly educated. Regarding historical changes, in Southern Europe the initially higher approval among the highly educated for unmarried cohabitation and non-marital childbearing in 2006 had levelled out by 2018.
Schwanitz, Katrin
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Palumbo, Lydia
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Berrington, Ann
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Jalovaara, Marika
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8 August 2025
Schwanitz, Katrin
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Palumbo, Lydia
5eb89b92-bc5c-421a-8051-b69fd78fba4a
Berrington, Ann
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Jalovaara, Marika
8cc30212-e75a-46ba-9d23-972bbdd93109
Schwanitz, Katrin, Palumbo, Lydia, Berrington, Ann and Jalovaara, Marika
(2025)
The changing educational gradient in non-traditional attitudes toward family behaviour: a cross-national study
Center for Open Science
51pp.
(doi:10.31219/osf.io/8ngrj_v1).
Record type:
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Abstract
Second Demographic Transition (SDT) theory highlights how secularisation and individualism disrupted traditional family behaviours, e.g., high fertility and lifelong universal marriage, in Western countries. While non-traditional family behaviours appeared in Nordic countries first, later diffusing to other regions, variations in approval across educational groups and historical time remain underexplored. This study examines approval levels towards non-traditional behaviours—voluntary childless-ness, nonmarital cohabitation, nonmarital childbearing, parental divorce with children under 12, and mothers working with children under 3—across sociopolitical regimes in Europe, education levels, and historical time. European Social Survey data (2006, 2018) from 21 countries revealed different approval depending on the family behaviour. Approval was widespread for nonmarital cohabitation, nonmarital childbearing, and mothers working, but voluntary childlessness and parental divorce were less accepted. Country differences were not always as predicted by SDT theory: Nordic countries showed the highest approval for all non-traditional family behaviours, followed by Southern Europe, while Western and Eastern Europe were more resistant. Approval of maternal employment and parental divorce varied by education, with higher approval among the highly educated. Regarding historical changes, in Southern Europe the initially higher approval among the highly educated for unmarried cohabitation and non-marital childbearing in 2006 had levelled out by 2018.
Text
INVEST_WP_Schwanitz Palumbo Berrington Jalovaara
- Author's Original
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Published date: 8 August 2025
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Local EPrints ID: 510004
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510004
PURE UUID: 42b46892-ba69-4b5d-aa05-5c6acc8b6ffa
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Date deposited: 13 Mar 2026 17:33
Last modified: 14 Mar 2026 02:36
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Author:
Katrin Schwanitz
Author:
Lydia Palumbo
Author:
Marika Jalovaara
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