2001
DOI: 10.1177/0011392101049002004
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Life Course: Innovations and Challenges for Social Research

Abstract: Recent developments of life-course theory and research are discussed in a comparative framework. With accelerating social change, the life course has become a topic that centres on the interplay of personal and institutional dynamics through the life span that provides the temporal and social contexts for biographical planning and stock-taking. Modern life-course analysis asks to what extent biographies are losing their structural embeddedness in favour of negotiations among individuals, opportunities, institu… Show more

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Cited by 184 publications
(121 citation statements)
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“…The manner in which participants themselves adapted activities, objects and routines to meet their ongoing needs was often illustrative of 'the biographical foundation of agency' (Heinz & Kruger, 2001). It was not uncommon for older people to draw upon past experiences of more austere times to change the way they used the home or its contents, demonstrating the ability to improvise in order to support their independence.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The manner in which participants themselves adapted activities, objects and routines to meet their ongoing needs was often illustrative of 'the biographical foundation of agency' (Heinz & Kruger, 2001). It was not uncommon for older people to draw upon past experiences of more austere times to change the way they used the home or its contents, demonstrating the ability to improvise in order to support their independence.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, many individuals constantly work on a project of the self in order to make the best possible life plans (Beck 1992;Giddens 1991;Sennett 1998). The trend towards de-standardization puts more emphasis on individual resourcefulness and responsibility in shaping one's life course (Heinz and Krüger 2001). The question that rises, is to what extent choices made within the life course can be regarded as conscious strategies (Kuijsten 1999).…”
Section: Previous Research and Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Common interests may lead one or both partners to expect or feel obligated to give a lower priority to their individual career interests in order to invest in the 'collective project called family' (Beck and Beck-Gernsheim 1995;Giddens 1991;Hardill 2002). In general, women experience less continuity in the life domain of work because of their responsibility for dependent lives (Heinz and Krüger 2001).…”
Section: Previous Research and Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Today, however, there is growing recognition that female life courses are more sensitive to competing demands from various institutions that women are forced to deal with (Heinz and Krüger 2001). As Cerami (2008) stressed it, in Central and Eastern European post-communist countries characterised by the economic restructuring resulting in changing social structure, welfare states have to face both old and new social risks, the main challenge being 'the establishment of new and different forms of refamilisation, in which women are required to fulfil the social and economic function of wives, mothers, workers, and care-givers in a new and substantially less secure market economy' (Cerami 2008(Cerami : 1099.…”
Section: A Glimpse On Precariousness Based On Life-course Patternsmentioning
confidence: 99%