This is a proposal for an exploratory/developmental research grant (R21) focusing on developmental idealism and marriage, childbearing, and divorce. The purpose of the proposed project is to create and test questionnaires and protocols that will be appropriate for measuring developmental idealism and its relationship to marriage, childbearing, and divorce in a wide variety of settings around the world. Developmental idealism, which grows out of the influential models of modernization and development, identifies goals to be pursued, a means for evaluating family life, a causal framework identifying causal influences between family and social and economic life, and statements about human rights. There are four main propositions of developmental idealism: (a) modern social and economic life is good and attainable; (b) modern family life is good and attainable; (c) modern families and modern socioeconomic conditions causally influence each other; and (d) human beings have the right to be free and equal, with relationships based on consent. We believe that these propositions have been disseminated widely around the world and have had great influence on family and demographic life. Despite the theoretical and practical importance of developmental idealism for family life, there are no well-recognized tools to measure acceptance or rejection of developmental idealism in the world's populations. This dearth of measurement tools makes it difficult to implement a research program investigating developmental idealism and its influence on family life. This project will create and evaluate measures of beliefs concerning developmental idealism and their relationship to marriage, childbearing, and divorce. Qualitative studies will guide the creation of these measurement tools, and we will conduct pilot studies in Argentina, China, Egypt, and the United States to test the extent to which our measures are appropriate in these disparate settings. The measures created in this project will provide the means to launch in a future project an international program of research concerning developmental idealism and its role in family life. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Exploratory/Developmental Grants (R21)
Project #
5R21HD050259-02
Application #
7140227
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-HOP-B (90))
Program Officer
Evans, V Jeffrey
Project Start
2005-08-05
Project End
2008-07-31
Budget Start
2006-08-01
Budget End
2008-07-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$184,792
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Department
Miscellaneous
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
073133571
City
Ann Arbor
State
MI
Country
United States
Zip Code
48109
Thornton, Arland; Binstock, Georgina; Young-DeMarco, Linda et al. (2016) Evaluating the measurement reliabilities and dimensionality of developmental idealism measures. Chin J Sociol 2:609-635
Lai, Qing; Thornton, Arland (2015) The making of family values: developmental idealism in Gansu, China. Soc Sci Res 51:174-88
Binstock, Georgina; Thornton, Arland; Abbasi-Shavazi, Mohammad J et al. (2013) Influences on the Knowledge and Beliefs of Ordinary People about Developmental Hierarchies. Int J Comp Sociol 54:325-344
Thornton, Arland; Binstock, Georgina; Abbasi-Shavazi, Mohammad Jalal et al. (2012) Knowledge and beliefs about national development and developmental hierarchies: The viewpoints of ordinary people in thirteen countries. Soc Sci Res 41:1053-68
Thornton, Arland; Binstock, Georgina; Yount, Kathryn M et al. (2012) International fertility change: new data and insights from the developmental idealism framework. Demography 49:677-98
Xie, Yu; Thornton, Arland; Wang, Guangzhou et al. (2012) Societal projection: Beliefs concerning the relationship between development and inequality in China. Soc Sci Res 41:1069-84