How Does the Family Influence the Process of Transition to Adulthood? A Comparative Study of Young People with and without Family Ties in Spain
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Research Methods
- Institutionalisation (questions for ex-ward youths). In this block, they were asked about their stay in the youth protection centre.
- Support figures. The questions were related to their closest social networks and the type of support they provide them.
- Young people’s desires and hobbies. This block considered different questions involving their leisure time practices.
- Transition to adult life. In this block, we sought to identify the barriers participants encounter to their independence, emancipation, and stability in their adult life, as well as their expectations for the future.
2.3. Procedure
2.4. Research Ethics
3. Results
3.1. Supporting Figures
“In my family, I really interact with them a lot and I always tell them everything, so my support is from my parents, my sister, my cousin, and outside I have my friends, who also provide support” JN3-F.
“Most people have support from their family and we have nothing, zero” KJX4-G.
“There are people who have it easier because they have family help. For example, your family has advised you that it is good to study. We don’t have that, since we are young looking for life alone. At 16 we started working, we left school, which makes studying and finding work much more difficult” MJX1-G.
“I go to the people from the foundation when I have a problem” HJX5-G.
“They get money from the government for us and the less time we are there, the less money they spend on us” AJX2-G.
“In the support center for ex-wards, they force us to do company internships that sometimes provide no way out, or you don’t like them, but if you don’t do them, they throw you out” AJX2-G.
“The mentor family tries to help you. For example, they give you confidence in yourself, they introduce you to their family, their children, they plan activities and treat you like one of the family… A mentor is what every child would have needed” MJX1-G.
“There are not collaborative external families for every youth” MJX1-G.
“My teacher was a role model for me, and I met her in vocational school. We interact a lot with her, and whenever there’s a problem, she is always there to give us all advice” VJN4-F.
3.2. Autonomy
“…but sometimes you try to work and they don’t let you, now I tried to go work in an olive grove and they told me no, I’m not going to drop out of school to start working” KJX4-G.
“moved to another city to study what I wanted” RJN3-F.
“In my case, the transition involved job placement, I have had no problem finding work, it is true, it was very natural for me” PJN4-F.
“No, we do not have the same opportunities, that much is obvious” MJX1-G, AJX2-G, TJX3-G, KJX4-G, HJX5-G.
“We stop studying and start working very early, there are others who were not in a protection center, and even if they didn’t think so, they needed to be because their families are broken, it is much more difficult, because who helps these people find work” MJX1-G.
“Not finding a job, reaching a certain age and still being unemployed, that’s my biggest fear; other than that, I don’t have a problem with anything” VJN2-F.
“Now the problem is the day we have to leave the flat, because they are rushing us” MJX1-G.
“We realize that our time here is limited and that one day soon it’s going to end. One day they are going to kick us out, and then you’ll have to do everything by force” AJX2-G.
“My problems have been anxiety and stress due to the academic issue, mostly due to the amount of homework, which takes a lot of time away from my leisure activities, so that ends up causing me stress and a bit of anxiety” AJN5-F.
“I have had many problems with my family and they can’t help me at all“ MJX1-G.
“We pretend that we are strong, that we can bear the burden and keep going, but there comes a point when we can’t go on any longer, and you can’t, and it’s hard to breathe, you lack oxygen, and when you try to unburden yourself, you fall” MJX1-G.
“We think about how we’re going to get out of here and what I’m going to find, and how I’m going to pay the rent and pay for the house, and if I’m going to have a job. Mainly, if I’m going to have the resources to get by” MJX1-G.
“I want to have a job and make a living” TJX3-G.
“The main thing for us is work, that’s the only way to get by” AJX2-G.
“I really enjoy my job, so I work at it as long as I can and work my way up as much as I can, and at the same time I enjoy travelling and getting to know many cultures. I have no expectations for a partner or children” PJN4-F.
“When I get a job, I would like to get married and start a family” TJX3-F.
“I’m good at dancing and I don’t know how I discovered it. My parents enrolled me in an academy when I was little. I’ve been doing it all my life and I think I’m pretty good at it” RJN3-F
“I do theatre in my village with various groups and play video games, I like to sing and listen to music, and write poetry” AJN5-F.
“I like writing poetry, I’m not a poet or anything like that, […] I write as a hobby. Then I like reading a lot and music too, I play the horn and the piano” EJN1-F.
“I have been doing sports since I was a child, different sports and in my free time I do sports and I also play the trumpet when I can” VJN2-F.
“Sometimes to play sports I need to meet up with people, and they can’t, but even then, I want to go out” AJX2-G.
“They set the schedule for you without asking. For example, they give you two hours a day and they don’t ask you which hours you prefer. They tell you, for example, from six to eight you can go out, but maybe that time isn’t good for you” AJX2-G.
4. Discussion/Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Extract from the Focus Group | Tag | Code | Central Category | |
---|---|---|---|---|
“I have strong relationships with my family. I tell them everything, so my support is from my parents, my sister, my cousin, and outside I have my friends, who also support me” RJN3-F | Family-YG 1 | Supporting figures | Social and family support | The young people transition to independent adults |
“Although if I have any doubts I ask. But if I’m sure, I make the decision by myself” MJX1-G | Guardianship-YG | |||
“Yes, if we need school supplies, they buy them for us, now they tell us to find our own way” MJX1-G | Guardianship-YG | Other types of support | ||
“First of all, they have helped me a lot in terms of work, then they are always there to support me emotionally, during the lockdown I spent a few days in their house because we had to be confined together and everything” PJN4-F | Family-YG | |||
“…but sometimes you try to work and they don’t let you, now I have tried to go to work in the olive grove and they have told me no, I am not going to leave a course to start working” KJX4-G. | Guardianship-YG | Autonomy | Learning opportunities | |
“Not at all, because for example, I moved to another city to study what I wanted, I think that in the case of children under guardianship, they have that opportunity, to do what they want to do. If they are in a centre in Madrid, and you want to study in an art school in Barcelona, they are not going to move them to do it” RJN3-F | Family-YG | |||
“I think that if many of them already have problems accessing education, they will be even more limited in finding a stable job or a job that they want” VJN2-F | Family-YG | Employment opportunities | ||
“What we think is that where we are is going to end one day and that we have very little time and it will end. One day they’re going to throw us out, and you have to do everything by force, and sometimes, even if we do everything, they tell us it’s all for nought, our time here comes to an end and we find ourselves on the street with no work or anything and we have to leave. Most of them lose everything and have to put up with it” AJX2-G | Guardianship-YG | Time pressure | ||
“I’m afraid of not finding a job, of reaching a certain age and still being unemployed, that’s my biggest fear, otherwise I don’t have any problems at all” RJN3-F | Family-YG | Psychosocial well-being | ||
“We pretend that we are strong, that we can bear the burden and keep going, but there comes a point when we can’t go on any longer, and you can’t, and it’s hard to breathe, you lack oxygen, and when you try to unburden yourself, you fall. That’s why I prefer not to say anything” MJX1-G | Guardianship-YG | |||
“...To have a partner, a house, a family, a pet, a job” KJX4-G | Guardianship-YG | Personal aspirations | ||
“... to work at my job as long as I can and to work my way up as much as I can and at the same time enjoy travelling and getting to know many cultures. I have no expectations for a partner or children” PJN4-F | Family-YG | |||
“Doing sport, reading, watching films and meeting friends. I do think they are healthy” RJN3-F | Family-YG | Free time | ||
“...going outside, running, I like sport” TJX3-G | Guardianship-YG |
Code | Guardianship-YG | Family-YG |
---|---|---|
Social and family support | - Conditional and temporary support (administration) - Emancipation without support | - Unconditional support (family) - Emancipation with support (emotional, time, training) |
Other types of support | - Demand support during institutionalization (e.g., mentor family) and emancipation (e.g., financial and training support) | - They have sufficient support (not just parents, but also a support network made up of older siblings, educational mentor, etc.) |
Code | Guardianship-YG | Family-YG |
---|---|---|
Learning opportunities | Imposed academic training | They choose their academic training |
Employment opportunities | - More difficulties - No support - Less academic training | - More opportunities - They have support - Academic training |
Time pressure | - Little time for emancipation -They don’t have enough support - Very concerned about the pressure to be independent | - They have time - They have support - Moderate concern about the pressure to be independent |
Psychosocial well-being | - More risk factors that decrease their psychosocial well-being - Problems that contribute to an inadequate transition to adulthood | - Fewer risk factors that decrease their psychosocial well-being - Not involved in the transition to adulthood |
Personal aspirations | Simple aspirations (to have a job) | Higher aspirations (travel, career advancement) |
Free time | - More problems - Less free time and less variety - Reason: escape | - More leisure possibilities and free time - Reason: fun or additional education |
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Cano-López, L.; De la Fuente-Robles, Y.M.; Fuentes, V.; Aranda, M.; Espinilla-Estévez, M. How Does the Family Influence the Process of Transition to Adulthood? A Comparative Study of Young People with and without Family Ties in Spain. Sustainability 2021, 13, 8919. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13168919
Cano-López L, De la Fuente-Robles YM, Fuentes V, Aranda M, Espinilla-Estévez M. How Does the Family Influence the Process of Transition to Adulthood? A Comparative Study of Young People with and without Family Ties in Spain. Sustainability. 2021; 13(16):8919. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13168919
Chicago/Turabian StyleCano-López, Leticia, Yolanda María De la Fuente-Robles, Virginia Fuentes, María Aranda, and Macarena Espinilla-Estévez. 2021. "How Does the Family Influence the Process of Transition to Adulthood? A Comparative Study of Young People with and without Family Ties in Spain" Sustainability 13, no. 16: 8919. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13168919
APA StyleCano-López, L., De la Fuente-Robles, Y. M., Fuentes, V., Aranda, M., & Espinilla-Estévez, M. (2021). How Does the Family Influence the Process of Transition to Adulthood? A Comparative Study of Young People with and without Family Ties in Spain. Sustainability, 13(16), 8919. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13168919