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Exploring grand mothering across ethnic and cultural diversity

Sharon Wray-2013-11-01-University of Huddersfield Repository (University of Huddersfield)
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TL;DRAbstract

There are 14 million grandparents in the UK and the majority of these are aged 65 and over (Grandparents Plus, 2011). However this population is diverse in relation to for example age, ethnicity, social and economic class, and sexuality. Yet there remains a lack of research examining the diversity represented within the grand parenting role. The majority of research available is American and has focused on grand parenting in relation to; changing family structures, functional roles and responsibilities, intergenerational reciprocity, and welfare needs. This has provided useful insight into the experience of grand parenting but tells us little about the UK context. However, it has also been criticised for inadequate theoretical and conceptual development. One example of this is the limited theorisation of how axes of identity such as age, religion, ethnicity, and gender, interconnect with and shape the grandmother-grandchild relationship. Further development of this could offer new ways

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There are 14 million grandparents in the UK and the majority of these are aged 65 and over (Grandparents Plus, 2011). However this population is diverse in relation to for example age, ethnicity, social and economic class, and sexuality. Yet there remains a lack of research examining the diversity represented within the grand parenting role. The majority of research available is American and has focused on grand parenting in relation to; changing family structures, functional roles and responsibilities, intergenerational reciprocity, and welfare needs. This has provided useful insight into the experience of grand parenting but tells us little about the UK context. However, it has also been criticised for inadequate theoretical and conceptual development. One example of this is the limited theorisation of how axes of identity such as age, religion, ethnicity, and gender, interconnect with and shape the grandmother-grandchild relationship. Further development of this could offer new ways

Keywords

GrandparentEthnic groupSociologyGender studiesReciprocity (cultural anthropology)Diversity (politics)Context (archaeology)Human sexuality

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