ABSTRACT

Over the past few years there has been a surge of interest in Britain on grandparenting - although it is still a long way behind the USA and several European countries in research in the area. The driving impetus for research is coming from parenting organizations and government departments concerned about the effects on female employment of shortages in nursery places, and about the effect of "parenting deficits" on children. Greater involvement of grandmothers in caring for children has seemed to offer a solution to many related problems. It promises to improve care within the family, and enable mothers to take on paid work with fewer fears for the consequences, without removing other working adults in the family from their jobs. This text discusses how today's grandmothers are changing the image and role that they filled in the past.

part

Veteran Grandmothers

chapter |10 pages

Calling All Grandparents

chapter |9 pages

Watching the Family Unfold

chapter |9 pages

The Long March

chapter |6 pages

Starting All over Again

chapter |4 pages

What Revolution: Whose Revolution?

chapter |9 pages

Diary of a Supergran

chapter |8 pages

A Continuous Revolution

part |63 pages

Experienced Hands

chapter |7 pages

Finding Out What is Important

chapter |10 pages

On Being a Grandmother

chapter |5 pages

Where have the Neighbours Gone?

chapter |8 pages

A Grandmother Dispossessed

chapter |8 pages

Our Changing Lives

chapter |6 pages

Generation to Generation

part |64 pages

Newer Recruits

chapter |10 pages

Going Down My Nan’s

chapter |5 pages

Grandma: Mark 2000

chapter |10 pages

The New Grandmother 23

chapter |9 pages

My Friend Cato 24

chapter |10 pages

Handing On

part |21 pages

Grandmothers-In-Waiting

chapter |8 pages

Contemplating Grandmotherhood

chapter |5 pages

The Grandmother Manqué

chapter |6 pages

Waiting Fairly Patiently