Générations démographiques, générations familiales

Demographers can help define the concept of generation, and specifically why people feel they belong to a group based on their age. We present an example of such a demographic approach by referring to family generations, i.e. the partition of a person’s kin into three groups: lateral kinship, formed...

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Main Author: Daniel Devolder
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: ADR Temporalités 2004-06-01
Series:Temporalités
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/temporalites/699
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author Daniel Devolder
author_facet Daniel Devolder
author_sort Daniel Devolder
collection DOAJ
description Demographers can help define the concept of generation, and specifically why people feel they belong to a group based on their age. We present an example of such a demographic approach by referring to family generations, i.e. the partition of a person’s kin into three groups: lateral kinship, formed by siblings and first cousins, ascending kinship formed by one’s parents, uncles and aunts and grandparents, and descending kinship, composed of ones children, nephews and nieces and grandchildren. In past socities, no clear age barrier existed between these three groups whereas on the contrary age mixing between kin generations in contemporary societies no longer occurs. This might help understand why our classical « generation gap » didn’t bother our ancestors. The reader will find figures based on a simulation model of kinship that allow us to study the multiple dimensions of the process leading to the progressive separation of various kin groups according to age.
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publishDate 2004-06-01
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series Temporalités
spelling doaj-art-212909704e1f4b89892ce8373ffdcb5b2025-08-20T02:34:16ZfraADR TemporalitésTemporalités1777-90062102-58782004-06-01210.4000/temporalites.699Générations démographiques, générations familialesDaniel DevolderDemographers can help define the concept of generation, and specifically why people feel they belong to a group based on their age. We present an example of such a demographic approach by referring to family generations, i.e. the partition of a person’s kin into three groups: lateral kinship, formed by siblings and first cousins, ascending kinship formed by one’s parents, uncles and aunts and grandparents, and descending kinship, composed of ones children, nephews and nieces and grandchildren. In past socities, no clear age barrier existed between these three groups whereas on the contrary age mixing between kin generations in contemporary societies no longer occurs. This might help understand why our classical « generation gap » didn’t bother our ancestors. The reader will find figures based on a simulation model of kinship that allow us to study the multiple dimensions of the process leading to the progressive separation of various kin groups according to age.https://journals.openedition.org/temporalites/699kinshipcohortshistorical evolutionEuropedemographic transitionfertility
spellingShingle Daniel Devolder
Générations démographiques, générations familiales
Temporalités
kinship
cohorts
historical evolution
Europe
demographic transition
fertility
title Générations démographiques, générations familiales
title_full Générations démographiques, générations familiales
title_fullStr Générations démographiques, générations familiales
title_full_unstemmed Générations démographiques, générations familiales
title_short Générations démographiques, générations familiales
title_sort generations demographiques generations familiales
topic kinship
cohorts
historical evolution
Europe
demographic transition
fertility
url https://journals.openedition.org/temporalites/699
work_keys_str_mv AT danieldevolder generationsdemographiquesgenerationsfamiliales