Family history at the crossroads: reflections on past, present, and future challenges

Abstract This paper contains the reflections of the author on the state of family history within the constellation of History and the Social Sciences. The first part of the paper presents a brief outline of how the discipline was founded and the elements in play that contributed to its enormous init...

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Main Author: David Sven Reher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2024-12-01
Series:Genus
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s41118-024-00235-y
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author David Sven Reher
author_facet David Sven Reher
author_sort David Sven Reher
collection DOAJ
description Abstract This paper contains the reflections of the author on the state of family history within the constellation of History and the Social Sciences. The first part of the paper presents a brief outline of how the discipline was founded and the elements in play that contributed to its enormous initial success, especially visible during the last three decades of the twentieth century. In recent years, however, there is some indication that research output on family history has been in decline and, more important, appears to have lost a significant part of the luster it once had. In the second part of this paper the author looks at the importance of promoting a past–present dialogue on the family and the way both historians and social scientists understand it. Ways of strengthening interactions between family history and family studies are discussed, as is the crucial importance for the discipline of the data revolution currently underway that for the first time offers massive information about families around the world over the past six decades. The author argues that both historians and social scientists have much to say about family life during this relatively recent past, albeit from very different perspectives. Studying family change constitutes a key challenge for the field. We discuss different ways of approaching this issue in the recent past, as well as the advisability of looking at the concept of family systems more closely. In societies or regions where earlier more historical data exist (normally in the more developed world), it may also be possible to link existing historical results to those from the census microdata era in order to provide a new, long-term perspective on family life spanning two centuries or even more. For social scientists and family historians alike, understanding the key dimensions of change and their implications for society constitute a crucial challenge for the discipline.
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spelling doaj-art-11c13dd389c24ecebeef4fdfb2948bd02024-12-22T12:21:02ZengSpringerOpenGenus2035-55562024-12-0180111810.1186/s41118-024-00235-yFamily history at the crossroads: reflections on past, present, and future challengesDavid Sven Reher0Universidad Complutense de MadridAbstract This paper contains the reflections of the author on the state of family history within the constellation of History and the Social Sciences. The first part of the paper presents a brief outline of how the discipline was founded and the elements in play that contributed to its enormous initial success, especially visible during the last three decades of the twentieth century. In recent years, however, there is some indication that research output on family history has been in decline and, more important, appears to have lost a significant part of the luster it once had. In the second part of this paper the author looks at the importance of promoting a past–present dialogue on the family and the way both historians and social scientists understand it. Ways of strengthening interactions between family history and family studies are discussed, as is the crucial importance for the discipline of the data revolution currently underway that for the first time offers massive information about families around the world over the past six decades. The author argues that both historians and social scientists have much to say about family life during this relatively recent past, albeit from very different perspectives. Studying family change constitutes a key challenge for the field. We discuss different ways of approaching this issue in the recent past, as well as the advisability of looking at the concept of family systems more closely. In societies or regions where earlier more historical data exist (normally in the more developed world), it may also be possible to link existing historical results to those from the census microdata era in order to provide a new, long-term perspective on family life spanning two centuries or even more. For social scientists and family historians alike, understanding the key dimensions of change and their implications for society constitute a crucial challenge for the discipline.https://doi.org/10.1186/s41118-024-00235-yFamilyFamily historyChangeDeveloped and developing worldFamily systemsMicro-census data
spellingShingle David Sven Reher
Family history at the crossroads: reflections on past, present, and future challenges
Genus
Family
Family history
Change
Developed and developing world
Family systems
Micro-census data
title Family history at the crossroads: reflections on past, present, and future challenges
title_full Family history at the crossroads: reflections on past, present, and future challenges
title_fullStr Family history at the crossroads: reflections on past, present, and future challenges
title_full_unstemmed Family history at the crossroads: reflections on past, present, and future challenges
title_short Family history at the crossroads: reflections on past, present, and future challenges
title_sort family history at the crossroads reflections on past present and future challenges
topic Family
Family history
Change
Developed and developing world
Family systems
Micro-census data
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s41118-024-00235-y
work_keys_str_mv AT davidsvenreher familyhistoryatthecrossroadsreflectionsonpastpresentandfuturechallenges