Az alábbi feltételek érvényesek minden, a Központi Statisztikai Hivatal (a továbbiakban: KSH) Statisztikai Szemle c. folyóiratában (a továbbiakban: Folyóirat) megjelenő tanulmányra. Felhasználó a tanulmány vagy annak részei felhasználásával egyidejűleg tudomásul veszi a jelen dokumentumban foglalt felhasználási feltételeket, és azokat magára nézve kötelezőnek fogadja el. Tudomásul veszi, hogy a jelen feltételek megszegéséből eredő valamennyi kárért felelősséggel tartozik.1. A jogszabályi tartalom kivételével a tanulmányok a szerzői jogról szóló 1999. évi LXXVI. törvény (Szjt.) szerint szerzői műnek minősülnek. A szerzői jog jogosultja a KSH. 2. A KSH földrajzi és időbeli korlátozás nélküli, nem kizárólagos, nem átadható, térítésmentes felhasználási jogot biztosít a Felhasználó részére a tanulmány vonatkozásában. A felhasználási jog keretében a Felhasználó jogosult a tanulmány:a) oktatási és kutatási célú felhasználására (nyilvánosságra hozatalára és továbbítására a 4. pontban foglalt kivétellel) a Folyóirat és a szerző(k) feltüntetésével; b) tartalmáról összefoglaló készítésére az írott és az elektronikus médiában a Folyóirat és a szerző(k) feltüntetésével; c) részletének idézésére -az átvevő mű jellege és célja által indokolt terjedelemben és az eredetihez híven -a forrás, valamint az ott megjelölt szerző(k) megnevezésével. 4. A Felhasználó nem jogosult a tanulmány továbbértékesítésére, haszonszerzési célú felhasználására. Ez a korlátozás nem érinti a tanulmány felhasználásával előállított, de az Szjt. szerint önálló szerzői műnek minősülő mű ilyen célú felhasználását. 5. A tanulmány átdolgozása, újra publikálása tilos. 6. A 3. a)-c.) pontban foglaltak alapján a Folyóiratot és a szerző(ke)t az alábbiak szerint kell feltüntetni:"Forrás: Statisztikai Szemle c. folyóirat 98. évfolyam 2. számában megjelent, Duráczky Bálint, Bozsonyi Károly által írt, '"Nem sokaság, hanem lélek…" -A nyári olimpiai játékok nemzetek közötti éremmegoszlásának statisztikai modellje' című tanulmány (link csatolása)" 7. A Folyóiratban megjelenő tanulmányok kutatói véleményeket tükröznek, amelyek nem esnek szükségképpen egybe a KSH vagy a szerzők által képviselt intézmények hivatalos álláspontjával.
In our study, we aimed at examining the childbearing desires of adolescents and young adults living in Hungarian large families. Two different methods were used during the dyadic data analysis. On the one hand, correlation between the fertility desires of siblings, on the other hand, the absolute difference in the planned number of children was measured. The data indicate that in two out of the three dyads of siblings, created by the order of birth, significant correlation can be measured. Pseudo-dyads were created in order to test if the above mentioned parallel data can be explained by the similar socio-demographic characteristics of the sample families. The correlation disappeared in case of the randomly paired adolescents and young adults. All in all, family background is likely to have a more important impact on fertility desires of youngsters than similar social environment. Keywords IntroductionWhen making our most important private decisions, besides personal motivations and individual peculiarities, the social environment we live in also plays an essential role. Morel raises the question 'whether people act differently than it is expected from them by the norms of contemporary society and social environment with reason' (MOREL 1989, 60; our trans.). 1 The plans and desires about family life are influenced by many factors, which are in complicated interaction with each other.The present study aims at examining the childbearing desires of a special population, adolescents and young adults living in large families. Before reviewing the scholarly literature relevant to the topic, it should be noted that social sciences differentiate between fertility intentions and fertility desires. While the first term refers to childbearing within a relatively short time period (usually three years), the latter one indicates how many offspring the questioned person wants in his or her lifetime. Referring to completed fertilities, which are of high importance regarding demography, fertility intention allows the setting of more accurate prognoses; although the number of children eventually born almost always lags behind the desired number. Although measuring fertility intentions is usually preferred by demographers, the importance of fertility desires should not been ignored.Desires are always present in theories in a way that explains actual fertility behaviour. The Theory of reasoned action, one of the most often cited theories was elaborated by Icek AJZEN and Martin FISHBEIN (1980). A further developed version of this model, Theory of planned behaviour, was devised by the same author. (AJZEN 1991;FISHBEIN & AJZEN 2010). The fundamental concept of this theory is fertility intentions. These are affected by three main determinants: attitudes, subjective or perceived norms and perceived behavioural control. Although hypothetical variables, such as fertility desires and ideals, are not explicit components of the model, these are relevant background factors which influence intentions indirectly via attitudes, norms and perc...
ABSTRACT:In our study, we have examined the intergenerational transmission of religious self-identification of parents and their offspring. Data were collected among members of 600 large Hungarian families. In the research, we applied dyadic data analysis to explore whether the different types of religiosity would be transmitted with an equal probability, and which factors have a significant effect on the intergenerational process. Our data revealed that family is the prime field of religious socialization, and detected a significant correlation between the religiosity of fathers, mothers, and their offspring. Our results confirmed the hypothesis: that institutional religious practice facilitates the intergenerational transmission of religiosity. Similarly, children quite often take over the definite non-religious ideology of their parents. Fuzzy religiosity is the least likely to be transmitted.
Love 4 by arguing that the 'classic' family has begun to give away to a multiplicity of new types of family. Normal Chaos of Love showed how single-parent families and patchwork families emerged due to successive marriages and divorces. Distant Love also focuses on a new type of family by incorporating the global picture and introducing the concept of world families. In Beck and Beck's own words, the aim of the book is to "focus on the globalization of love". The content of the book does not rely on the authors' own research or empirical findings but illustrates its points using numerous examples from other studies.The book employs diagnostic theory. In other words, it adopts the approach that a social phenomenon needs to be described first, and only after this can the reasons for it be observed. Consequently, the book is rather descriptive than explanatory. Moreover, the evolution of the culture of love follows the process of modernization. From the nation-state paradigm we move forward to the universalist model that came along with the development of European modernity from which emerged the conflict between freedom, equality and love, leaving behind the model of 'one household, one nationality, one identity'. The universality of the European model discussed in Normal Chaos of Love is, however, rethought and supplemented in this new book. The recent dominance of global capitalism and reflexive modernity have ushered in a (Western) cosmopolitan culture that is derived and interwoven from different areas of the globe and creates conflict within families.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.