This volume provides readers with recent sociological  approaches to family understanding, theorising and practices within the  context of continuities and change, both across generations and during  individual life courses. The contributors uniquely investigate the friction  between persisting family needs and changing circumstances, between holding on  to traditional family norms and adapting to fast-changing demands. Authors  from nine countries develop and apply innovative theoretical and  methodological approaches for a more differentiated description of European  family lives at the beginning of the 21st century, and show that family  sociology has achieved significant commonalities across national borders in  Europe, thus helping our understanding of complex family realities.
 The book will be essential reading for students and  scholars with an interest in family and intimate life, family sociology and  policy, sociology and gender studies.