Details
| Originalsprache | Englisch |
|---|---|
| Titel des Sammelwerks | Youth Transition and Social Welfare |
| Untertitel | A Comparative Study of Japan, Germany, Switzerland, The United Kingdom, and Norway |
| Herausgeber/-innen | Akio Inui, Jan Skrobanek, Christian Imdorf, Birgit Reissig, Andy Biggart |
| Erscheinungsort | Singapur |
| Herausgeber (Verlag) | Springer Singapore |
| Seiten | 199–226 |
| ISBN (elektronisch) | 978-981-96-8947-7 |
| ISBN (Print) | 978-981-96-8946-0 |
| Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - 17 Okt. 2025 |
Abstract
Fachgebiet (basierend auf ÖFOS 2012)
- SOZIALWISSENSCHAFTEN
- Soziologie
- Soziologie
- Bildungssoziologie
- SOZIALWISSENSCHAFTEN
- Soziologie
- Soziologie
- Jugendsoziologie
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Youth Transition and Social Welfare: A Comparative Study of Japan, Germany, Switzerland, The United Kingdom, and Norway. Hrsg. / Akio Inui; Jan Skrobanek; Christian Imdorf; Birgit Reissig; Andy Biggart. Singapur: Springer Singapore, 2025. S. 199–226.
Publikation: Beitrag in Buch/Bericht/Sammelwerk/Konferenzband › Beitrag in Buch/Sammelwerk › Forschung › Peer-Review
}
TY - CHAP
T1 - How Context Matters
T2 - Transition Patterns in a Country-Comparative Perspective
AU - Hori, Takeshi
AU - Inui, Akio
AU - Imdorf, Christian
AU - Skrobanek, Jan
AU - Reissig, Birgit
PY - 2025/10/17
Y1 - 2025/10/17
N2 - This chapter compares youth transitions and associated risks in Japan and four European countries. The comparison is based on the analyses of respective national data at two age windows (early 20s and around age 30) with a particular focus on gender. The first section presents an overview of young people’s transitions across the different national contexts, examining the commonalities and differences regarding the timing of school-to-work, housing and domestic transitions. The second section compares how school-to-work transitions are interlinked with housing and domestic transitions, while section three focuses on life satisfaction to analyse the extent to which young people perceive the non-completion of transitions as a risk. The fourth section summarises the key empirical findings and reflects upon them in relation to national labour market structures and welfare systems, as well as societal and transition norms. The final part explores the distribution of transition risks and opportunities. The results suggest that labour market position and structure make a difference in the distribution of risks for men, whereas for young women, the strength of the male-breadwinner norm is the main factor that relates to subjective risk perception. Youth welfare regimes also interconnect with transitions and the distribution of risks and opportunities.
AB - This chapter compares youth transitions and associated risks in Japan and four European countries. The comparison is based on the analyses of respective national data at two age windows (early 20s and around age 30) with a particular focus on gender. The first section presents an overview of young people’s transitions across the different national contexts, examining the commonalities and differences regarding the timing of school-to-work, housing and domestic transitions. The second section compares how school-to-work transitions are interlinked with housing and domestic transitions, while section three focuses on life satisfaction to analyse the extent to which young people perceive the non-completion of transitions as a risk. The fourth section summarises the key empirical findings and reflects upon them in relation to national labour market structures and welfare systems, as well as societal and transition norms. The final part explores the distribution of transition risks and opportunities. The results suggest that labour market position and structure make a difference in the distribution of risks for men, whereas for young women, the strength of the male-breadwinner norm is the main factor that relates to subjective risk perception. Youth welfare regimes also interconnect with transitions and the distribution of risks and opportunities.
KW - Children, Youth and Family Policy
KW - Comparative Sociology
KW - Sociology
KW - Sociology of Family, Youth and Aging
KW - Socioeconomic Scenarios
KW - Comparative Social Policy
U2 - 10.1007/978-981-96-8947-7_9
DO - 10.1007/978-981-96-8947-7_9
M3 - Contribution to book/anthology
SN - 978-981-96-8946-0
SP - 199
EP - 226
BT - Youth Transition and Social Welfare
A2 - Inui, Akio
A2 - Skrobanek, Jan
A2 - Imdorf, Christian
A2 - Reissig, Birgit
A2 - Biggart, Andy
PB - Springer Singapore
CY - Singapur
ER -