Grandparenting and intergenerational solidarity in multi-ethnic Singapore
Singapore is ageing rapidly as a result of declining fertility and increasing life expectancy. The increasing number and proportion of older people has brought to fore issues related to well-being at older ages. Older people lives are being transformed by changes in family structure, living arran...
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Format: | Thesis-Master by Research |
Language: | English |
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Nanyang Technological University
2020
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/136845 |
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Institution: | Nanyang Technological University |
Language: | English |
Summary: | Singapore is ageing rapidly as a result of declining fertility and increasing life
expectancy. The increasing number and proportion of older people has brought to
fore issues related to well-being at older ages. Older people lives are being transformed
by changes in family structure, living arrangements, ideational shifts, migration
and changes in work force participation, among other factors. One key
aspect of older people’s lives that has not received much attention in the context
of Singapore, despite its importance, is grandparenting. Grandparenting represents
a key element of integrational relationships and bonding, and provides a
unique way to examine the effect of changing contexts on the ageing experience.
Employing qualitative interview method, I examine the interrelationships between
the generations—grandchildren, children and grandparents—by focussing
on Bengtson’s model of intergenerational solidarity and its various dimensions. I
investigate the influence of family by analysing the living arrangements of grandparents,
duration of interaction and frequency of visit between grandparents with
their children, children-in-law and grandchildren. The thesis also focusses on the
exchange of services between generations. I then examine the intergenerational
relationships, the ambivalence and disagreements between grandparents and
other family members in different dimensions of intergenerational relationship.
A key feature of this thesis is that it examines intergenerational solidarity through
the lenses of grandparenting and through the perspective of grandparents themselves.
The findings based on this approach illustrate the nuances of the interactions,
bonds, respect, disagreements, ambiguities that characterize intergenerational
relationships in a multi-ethnic society at the cross roads of modernity and
tradition. Grandparents see their role as a positive experience which contributes
to their wellbeing. The findings on the different dimensions of solidarity and ambivalence
contribute to the understanding of the changing expectations, norms
and practices that underpin intergenerational bonds. |
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