One-person households Flashcards
Are more or less people living in couples ?
Less
-there has been a big rise in the number of people living alone
Statistics for the number of people living alone
in 2006
almost 3 in 10 households (6.8milly people)
contained only one person
nearly 3x the figure for 1961
Age statistics of one-person households
half of all one-person households are people of pensionable age
-pensioner one-person households have doubled since 1961
-while those of non/ pensioners triples
-men under 65 were most likely to live aline w. particularly large increase in the number of young men living alone
Reasons for the increase in one-person households
-increase in separation and divorce
-decline in number marrying
-Peter Stein (1976) opting of ‘creative singlehood’
-fewer partners available in age group
Increase in separation and divorce
-lead to increase of 1PH
-especially among men under 65
usually because after divorce children most likely to live with their mother and father more likely to leave the home
Decline in number marrying
and trends towards people marrying later, mean more people are remaining single
-proportion of adults who are single has risen about half since 1971
Peter Stein (1976) ‘creative singlehood’
-growing number of people opting for ‘creative singlehood’
-deliberate choice to live alone
Fewer partners available in age group
-not all deliberately chose to live alone
- might just be fewer partners available in age group
-mainly older widows
Living apart together - Who did research on
‘LATs’ ?
Simon Duncan and Miranda Phillips for the British Social Attitudes Survey
(Thomson et al, 2008)
What did Simon Duncan and Miranda Phillips for the British Social Attitudes Survey
(Thomson et al, 2008) find?
that about 1/10 adults are LAT- that is, in a significant RS, but not married or cohabitating.
It has been suggested that this may reflect a trend towards less formalised relationships and ‘families of choice’
Who found that other factors play a role in whether couples live together?
Duncan and Phillips
Duncan and Phillips
found that both CHOICE and CONSTRAINT play a part in whether couples live together
e.g-
may not be able to afford to
minority want to keep their own home
Public attitudes towards LATs
favourable
-majority believe that ‘ a couple do not need to live together to have a strong rs’
while 20% saw LATs as their ‘ideal rs’
Duncan and Phillips conclusion
that LATs are not seen as abnormal
-probably does not amount to a rejection of more traditional relationships