The end of adolescence - Universiteit Utrecht

Lecture 12b the end of adolescence 

When does adolescence end? 

  • In the past – criteria that have been used to mark entry into adulthood include: 

  • Events such as marriage, child-bearing 

  • Important responsibilities to provide, protect, and procreate – duties towards others 

  • Gender-specific criteria 

  • Average age of marriage in the Netherlands 1950-2018 

  • Shift in percentage who marry + older ages 

  • Average age of the mother at the birth of a child in NL in 2018 

  • 29,9. Age of marriage: 35 

  • Shift in society to say that we don't need to marry first to have children 

  • Demographic distinctions 

  • Median age of marriage and child birth is now much later than it was in the past 

  • Young people attend school and college longer than in the past 

  • In addition, more young people are going to college before starting work 

  • From jobs to career 

Arnett's theory of emerging adulthood 

  • Influenced by theories of  

  • Erikson: prolonged adolescence 

  • Love, work, worldviews 

  • Levinson: novice phase 17-33 

  • Keniston: youth (role exploration) 

  • What is emerging adulthood? 

  • In Western cultures, could last from about 18 until the mid 20's 

  • A life period which is typically characterized by an ongoing exploration of, and experimentation with possible life directions 

  • Young people have left the dependency of childhood and adolescence, but have not entered the enduring responsibilities of adulthood 

  • Emerging: it is a process of becoming an adult 

  • In Western cultures 

  • Young people no longer consider marriage and other events (such as finishing school, getting a job, etc.) as criteria for adulthood 

  • They emphasize the capacity of the individual to stand alone as a self-sufficient person as the criterion for adulthood 

Top 3 criteria defining adulthood 

  • Responsible behavior, accept one's responsibility 

  • Autonomous, independent decision making 

  • Financial independence 

  • Individualistic qualities of character 

  • Criteria like chronological age and role transitions ranked very low 

5 aspects of emerging adulthood 

  • Age of identity exploration 

  • Trying out various possibilities, especially in love and work 

  • Difference between US and European educational system 

  • Us: university level: orientation where you can study different areas before you make a choice of your major 

  • European: more specialized, stronger connection to the work that you will be doing 

  • Difference between US and Southern Europe versus Nothern Europe in cohabitation (become smaller) 

  • Cohabitation more common in Northern Europe 

  • Age of instability 

  • Residential change 

  • Work changes, unemployment 

  • Changes in romantic partner 

  • Graph: changes in financial stability 

  • Most self-focused age of life 

  • Free from institutional demands and obligations 

  • Delayed leaving home, marriage and childbirth 

  • New occupational opportunities 

  • Focus on enjoying freedom and fun of emerging adulthood 

  • “marriage (and especially children) would put a damper on the ability to go out, to travel, to go skiing, to enjoy life” 

  • This is a peak period for individuals to engage in risky behaviors such as substance abuse, risky driving and unprotected sex 

  • Age of feeling in-between 

  • People feel ambivalent, in transition – not quite adults, but not adolescents either 

  • Age of possibilities 

  • When hopes flourish, when people have an unparalleled opportunity to transform their lives 

Work in emerging adulthood 

  • Unlike adolescents, most emerging adults are looking for a job that will turn into a career 

  • In the course of emerging adulthood, they may try 7 or 8 different jobs between the ages of 18 and 30 

(sub) Culture effects 

  • Subcultures within the US combine this individualistic view with a greater emphasis on obligation toward others drawn from values of their own sub-cultures 

  • Religious cultures in Western countries may have practices that lead to a shortened period of “emerging adulthood” than in the culture as a whole 

  • the LDS (Mormons) - marry younger than average 

Other cultural differences continued 

  • Israel: completing Military Service 

  • Argentina: being able to support a family financially 

  • S. Korea: being able to support their parents financially 

European countries and emerging adulthood and the transition to adulthood 

  • Neoliberal economic systems: 

  • the great majority is urban and educated middle class 

  • Social class differences quite narrow 

  • Postmaterialist values of autonomy and self-fulfillment 

  • Changed emphasis in marriage for children to the quality of the partner relationship 

  • The pursuit of such goals as “self-fulfillment, consumerism, and hedonism” seems to characterize postmodern European youth 

There are differences across Europe 

  • Nordic Countries – socialist or social democratic regimes 

  • High individual support 

  • Leave home earliest 

  • Apprenticeship models (Austria and Germany) 

  • Rapid transition to adulthood and quicker transition from school to work 

  • Western continental (France, Belgium, Luxemburg, NL) conservative welfare regimes 

  • Support families particularly in France (make transitions to parenthood sooner) 

  • Mid age home leaving 

  • Anglo-Saxon (UK and Ireland) - liberal welfare regimes – modest welfare  

  • early home leavers 

  • Early education leavers 

  • Bifurcated groups 

  • Southern region – Mediterranean – little support, therefore family important 

  • late home leavers 

  • Difficult and problematic school-to-work transitions 

  • Very slow and late transitions to independence and autonomy 

  • Post-socialist Eastern Europe 

  • Eastern central – like Western 

  • Eastern (Bulgaria, Russia – like Mediterranean) 

What accounts for this prolonged transition to adulthood? 

  • Demographic transitions: 

  • first demographic transition (FDT): refers to historical declines in mortality and fertility, as witnessed from the 18th century onwards in several European populations 

  • The endpoint: an older stationary population with replacement fertility, zero population growth, and life expectancies 

  • Therefore: no need for immigration, all households will become nuclear and conjugal (married with children) 

  • Baby boom of 60s followed by baby bust of 70s, expectations altered 

Second demographic transition (SDT) 

  • SDT does not see equilibrium as the endpoint 

  • The new developments from 1970s onwards expected to lead to: 

  • Sustained subreplacement fertility 

  • Multitude of living arrangements other than marriage 

  • Disconnection between marriage and procreation 

  • No stationary population 

  • Replacement migration now possible > increase in multicultural societies 

  • Considerable gains in longevity 

  • SDT theory: economic choice combined with autonomous preference drift 

  • no equilibrium point 

Other reasons for the shift 

  1. Shifts in economy and job market with increased need for prolonged education (semi-autonomy from parents) 

  1. Changing views on pre-marital sex 

  1. Breakdown of gender-based division of labor (delayed childbirth) 

  1. Normative change – relaxed attitude 

Has this led to change across the world? 

  • Rising proportions of cohabiting rather than marrying and subreplacement fertility is gone beyond Europe: 

  • Couples cohabiting before marriage: Japan and Taiwan 

  • Japan:  more sex equality, refusal of authoritarian traits, individualization of moral norms 

  • China: age of marriage now = 26 years; delay in marriage by 1.5 years, marriage rate has dropped by 6.3% from  2014 to 2015 

  •  Attitudes toward premarital sex not yet shifted (Furstenberg, 2013) 

  • May put extra burden on multigenerational homes 

  • (educational divide, gender role changes) 

Why be concerned about EA (or ages 18-30)? 

  • the age of onset of many mental health disorders is most often in adolescence  (12-18) 

  • However: 

  • 12-month prevalence of any psychiatric disorder is more than 40% in people aged 18–29 years  

  • Higher than in people in any other age range, especially for anxiety disorders, mood disorders, and substance misuse (Arnett et al. 2014). 

  • So: exploratory phase of life, but, it may bring other burdens 

  • Plus: recent increase in suicide rate (NL) among 20-25 year olds 

  • Vulnerable period for all youth, and even more so for youth considered to be vulnerable 

Vulnerable youth and the transition to adulthood 

  • Vulnerable youth populations: 

  • Mental health system 

  • Foster care system 

  • Juvenile justice system 

  • Criminal justice system 

  • Special education 

  • Health care system (physical disabilities and chronic illness) 

  • Runaway and homeless youth 

Vulnerable groups 

  • Often overlap 

  • Overrepresented by males, poverty and ethnic minority 

  • Often have poor outcomes in many domains 

  • Much variation within groups 

  • Similar factors for success 

Problems 

  • The lengthening transition to adulthood and the complexity it entails means that success is most likely with support.  But this poses even greater challenges for vulnerable youth.  

  • Reaching the age of majority may end services abruptly 

  • Homeless youth issues: 

  • have to find their own housing 

  • deficiencies in family support  

  • education deficits  <15% of homeless youth over 18 have a  high school diploma 

  • only 33% employed full time 

  • live below poverty level, cannot pay bills, public assistance 

  • unstable living arrangements 

  • high rates of parenthood, usually outside marriage 

  • high rates of high-risk sex and substance use 

Conclusions 

  • Emerging adulthood as a period is affected by culture 

  • Vulnerable youth within each culture also have extra burdens to deal with and also stronger needs for societal support 

  • Nonetheless, the vast majority of youth make a successful transition 

 

Log in or create your free account

Why create an account?

  • Your WorldSupporter account gives you access to all functionalities of the platform
  • Once you are logged in, you can:
    • Save pages to your favorites
    • Give feedback or share contributions
    • participate in discussions
    • share your own contributions through the 7 WorldSupporter tools
Join World Supporter
Join World Supporter
Follow the author: AnnevanVeluw
Comments, Compliments & Kudos

Add new contribution

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
Promotions
Image
The JoHo Insurances Foundation is specialized in insurances for travel, work, study, volunteer, internships an long stay abroad
Check the options on joho.org (international insurances) or go direct to JoHo's https://www.expatinsurances.org