The ethnic composition of the Dutch population has changed
considerably in the past decades. Nowadays a substantial proportion of youth in
the Netherlands has a migrant background.
This study focuses on how these young adults make the transition to adulthood
in the family domain. What preferences and behavior regarding family life
transitions are predominant among migrant and Dutch youth? How and to what
extent are these preferences and behavior among migrant and Dutch youth
influenced by their parents?
This study surveys different aspects of family life transitions: adolescents'
preferred type of union, their gender roles preferences, the preferred timing
of family life transitions, and patterns of co-residence in the parental home.
In order to compare distinct mechanisms of intergenerational transmission among
different migrant groups, this study includes the four largest migrant groups
in the Netherlands: Surinamese, Antilleans, Moroccans, and Turks, as well as
native Dutch.
Different sets of new data that include substantial numbers of youth from these
four migrant groups and Dutch are used.
As a result this study provides new empirical information and insights into
family life transitions among migrant and Dutch youth.
Helga de Valk has Master degrees in General Social Sciences and Education from
Utrecht University.
The present study was conducted at the Netherlands Interdisciplinary
Demographic Institute (NIDI, The Hague) and the Interuniversity Center for
Social Science Theory and Methodology (ICS, Utrecht).