Family members are known to serve as geographical attractors in migration, yet evidence for sex‐biased family migration in developed societies is mixed. We investigate gender differences in migration of family members in Finland. Using the FinnFamily register data set (N = 60,000 index individuals and their close kin), we explore family coresidence and migration within the 19 administrative regions of Finland in 1970–2012. We study the propensity for regional migration by gender and age, the likelihood for children to reside in the same region as their parents and to reunite after migration to different regions, and whether siblings function as regional attractors. Finland experienced intense regional migration to the capital area during the study period. Individual migration propensity peaked at infancy and at 18–28 years. Throughout their lives, most Finns live in the same region as their family members: over 65% with parents, over 55% with full sibling(s), and over 50% with half sibling(s). Siblings are likely to migrate to the same region, and having more siblings strengthens this attraction. Results also indicate some degree of patrilocality. Daughters migrate earlier and with higher rates than sons, whereas sons are at any age more likely to live in the same region as their parents. The propensity for adult brothers to live in the same region is also higher than for other sibling pairs. Family members serve as important geographical attractors to each other through the life course in contemporary Finland, and this is more pronounced for males than for females.
Studies on personality and friendship have often focused on similarities between friends, while differences in friendship patterns have received less attention. We used data from the British Household Panel Survey data (N=12,098) to investigate how people's personalities are related to various characteristics of their three closest friends. All personality traits of the Five Factor Model were associated with several friendship characteristics with effect sizes corresponding to correlations from r =-.06 to r = .09. Openness was an especially prominent and idiosyncratic trait; individuals with high openness were more likely to have friends who live further away, are of the opposite sex and another ethnicity, and whom they meet less often. Agreeableness, and to some extent extraversion, were related to more traditional friendship ties. Thus individuals with high agreeableness had known their friends for a longer time, lived close to them, and had more stay-at home people and kin among their friends. We conclude that personality is relevant for the social patterning of close friendship relations.
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