Repository logo
 

Partner (dis)agreement on moving desires and the subsequent moving behaviour of couples


Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Coulter, Rory 
van Ham, Maarten 
Feijten, Peteke 

Abstract

jats:titleABSTRACT</jats:title>jats:pMost studies of residential mobility decision‐making focus on the housing and neighbourhood satisfaction and pre‐move thoughts of individuals. This implicitly assumes that individual evaluations represent the wider household unit. However, if partners in a couple do not share evaluations of dwelling or neighbourhood quality or do not agree on whether moving is (un)desirable, ignoring these disagreements will lead to an inaccurate assessment of the strength of the links between moving desires and actual moves. Although overlooked in studies of residential mobility, partner disagreement plays an important role in the literature on family migration. This study is, therefore, one of the first to investigate disagreements in moving desires between partners and the subsequent consequences of such disagreements for moving behaviour. Drawing on British Household Panel Survey data and concepts from family migration studies, we find that disagreement about the desirability of moving is most likely where partners do not share perceptions of housing stress. Panel logistic regression models show that the moving desires of both partners interact to affect the moving behaviour of couples. Only 7.6% of couples move if only the man desires to move, whereas 20.1% of shared moving desires lead to a subsequent move. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

residential mobility, household decision-making, moving desires, partner disagreements, satisfaction

Journal Title

Population, Space and Place

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1544-8444
1544-8452

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley