Ruben van Gaalen
Statistics Netherlands
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ruben van Gaalen.
Journal of Family Issues | 2007
Hal Kendig; Pearl A. Dykstra; Ruben van Gaalen; Tuula Melkas
This article reviews and presents research findings on the relationships between parenthood and health over the life span. Existing research shows lacunae. The links between reproductive behavior and longevity generally focus on family size rather than contrasting parents and nonparents. Studies of marital status differentials in survival generally confound the effects of parenthood and marital status. Studies of the effects of multiple roles (combining parenthood, marriage, and employment) have the drawback that parenthood is equated with currently having children in the home. The authors provide new evidence on the health of people who have reached old age, contrasting those with and without children, in an attempt to tease out the effects of parenthood, marital status, and gender. Data from Australia, Finland, and the Netherlands are used. Insofar as parenthood effects are found, they pertain to health behaviors (smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical exercise), providing evidence for the social control influences of parenthood.
Ageing & Society | 2014
Niels Schenk; Pearl A. Dykstra; Ineke Maas; Ruben van Gaalen
ABSTRACT This study investigates how (a) the reliance on public care and (b) the type of public care received by older people in the Netherlands depends on the availability of partners and adult children. Older people aged 65 years and older were surveyed in the Netherlands Kinship Panel Study at two time-points. Survey results were linked to registry data on public care receipt at the two time-points. Multilevel models revealed that receiving frequent help in the household from children was not associated with public care receipt. Only men having a partner were less likely to receive public care. Further analyses comparing the receipt of skilled and unskilled forms of public care revealed that female partners are especially important in rendering unskilled care unnecessary compared to skilled care. Two arguments may explain our findings. One is that a gender-bias exists in processing public care requests – men are perceived as less able to provide care to their female partners. Another is that men lack the skills, or perceive themselves as lacking the care skills that female partners have. Caution is advised against introducing policy measures that increase pressure on female partners.
European Journal of Population-revue Europeenne De Demographie | 2016
Aslan Zorlu; Ruben van Gaalen
This study examines ethnic differences in leaving the parental home and the choice of destination (both location and quality of housing) in the Netherlands. Using unique individual administrative panel data, we study the mobility of the entire birth cohort 1983. In contrast to previous studies, this paper includes the geographical location and the quality of destination living arrangements in the analysis, in an attempt to explain ethnic differences in leaving the parental home. We show that ethnic minority youth, in particular those from Turkish and Moroccan origin, improve their housing quality when leaving the parental home. This results in earlier home-leaving than among young people of native Dutch origin. Our results on the early home-leaving behaviour of ethnic minority youth are robust with regard to the geographical distance of nest leavers.
Journal of Marriage and Family | 2006
Ruben van Gaalen; Pearl A. Dykstra
Journal of Marriage and Family | 2010
Annika Smits; Ruben van Gaalen; Clara H. Mulder
European Journal of Ageing | 2008
Ruben van Gaalen; Pearl A. Dykstra; Henk Flap
Journal of Aging Studies | 2010
Ruben van Gaalen; Pearl A. Dykstra; Aafke Komter
European Journal of Population-revue Europeenne De Demographie | 2015
Tom Kleinepier; Helga A. G. de Valk; Ruben van Gaalen
Family Court Review | 2017
Anne-Rigt Poortman; Ruben van Gaalen
Journal of Housing Economics | 2014
Aslan Zorlu; Clara H. Mulder; Ruben van Gaalen