Research project rEUsilience – Risks, Resources and Inequalities: Increasing Resilience in European Families

The problem that rEUsilience tackles is of lack of adaptive capacities or resilience (understood from a familial rather than individual perspective) and resulting dilemmas and inequalities.
Reusilience

Foto: Gabby Baldrocco / Mostphotos

The context is one of fast-paced changes in labour markets and income security to which families have to act as key responsive entities, cushioning potentially negative impacts and enabling/disabling risk-taking and change. In focusing especially on families that may not be able to respond and understanding the conditions that make for familial resilience more generally, the project answers 2 research questions: What challenges and difficulties are created or exacerbated for families by labour markets in the ‘new world of work’ and how do families try to overcome these? How do social policies contribute to familial resilience especially in terms of the extent to which they are inclusive, flexible and complementary?

To answer these questions rEUsilience looks at what different families actually do in situations calling for adaptiveness (e.g., need to change labour supply, need to manage or reorganise care, need to change gender and/or generational arrangements, need to engage in training or other activities to garner additional resources) and identifies perceived trade-offs in the context of families’ relations, commitments and different resource levels (broadly conceived). The project places this in a societal and policy context through both pan-European analyses of existing data (on policy and practice) and new focus group research in 6 quite different welfare states (BE, ES, HR, PL, SE, UK). Taken as a whole, the project’s research will identify the level of risk and socio-economic insecurity faced by families across Europe and the relative capacity of different family types to absorb socio-economic shocks by adjusting behaviours and structural arrangements and it will critically examine the role of policy as a contributory factor to related processes and outcomes.

The project is organised into 2 pillars: a Stocktaking pillar and a Policy Lab. The pillars are designed to closely interlink in terms of mission and evidence flow, to use appropriate and diverse methodologies and to have inbuilt pathways to impact especially through active engagement with a range of ‘sectors’. More specifically, the Policy Lab involves citizens and experts directly in policy review and problem solution and also uses simulations and other methods to road-test policy solutions. Among the outputs of the project as a whole are: a compendium of the risk situation of Europe's families; a series of dynamic analyses of actual risk behaviour in particular scenarios; accounts from families about how they view risk-taking and trade-offs between work and care; critical reviews of income protection, parental benefits and leaves and long-term care policies in terms of their inclusiveness, approach to flexibility and complementarity across policy fields; a novel questionnaire on family resilience in Europe taken to proof of concept stage; a set of policy proposals and roadmaps for their implementation.

Swedish Institute for Social Research

How Families Navigate Crises – New Findings Presented at rEUsilience Conference

The rEUsilience project (Risks, Resources, and Inequalities: Increasing Resilience in European Families) is a European research initiative funded by the EU under the Horizon Europe programme. The project is jointly coordinated by Rense Nieuwenhuis (SOFI, Stockholm University) and Mary Daly (Oxford University), and it has developed new evidence on how families respond to socio-economic shocks and major decisions related to managing family life and securing a decent income.

Swedish Institute for Social Research

European Initiative Calls for Enhanced Family Support Systems

Today, May 15th, marking the International Day of Families, the European research project rEUsilience presents new insights and recommendations aimed at enhancing family resilience in Europe. The project, led by Swedish Institute for Social Research (SOFI) and the University of Oxford, shows the importance of placing families at the heart of social policy reforms.

Swedish Institute for Social Research

SOFI-led research project named EU Commission Success Story

The EU Commission has officially recognized the rEUsilience research project, led by SOFI’s Rense Nieuwenhuis and Mary Daly from the University of Oxford, as a standout success story. The research highlights families as the cornerstone of resilient societies, and how policies that empower families can strengthen Europe’s ability to overcome social and economic challenges.

Swedish Institute for Social Research

Low-income families in Sweden struggle with exclusion

In a recently conducted study, researchers from Stockholm University and Oxford University shed light on how families in Sweden with low income are struggling with the sense of being excluded. Dealing with low income issues both substantial effort and a lot of time, the researchers note. Families in Sweden generally enjoy high living standards, but there are also significant inequalities. Therefore, researchers at the Swedish Institute for Social Research (SOFI) at Stockholm University held focus groups consisting of families with various backgrounds interviewed to understand different families' capacities to respond to socioeconomic risks. The interviews were analyzed by Professor Mary Daly from Oxford University and are part of the EU-funded rEUsilience project.   Concern for the children is paramount In the interviews, low-income families described tight margins that has become worse during recent inflation. Common to them all was the concern, especially, about not being able to meet the Swedish norm for optimal child upbringing. Concerns about their children feeling left out, experiencing loneliness, and facing mental health issues were prevalent. There were examples of parents being worried that their child would not have anything to tell at school after the holiday, or about a child offering to sell their computer game to buy a bike and play outside with friends, says Lovisa Backman who conducted the interviews. Several families described how they sought help from the government during particularly challenging times but often heard that their situation was not severe enough to qualify for support. Instead, families are forced to rely to voluntary sector providers to receive food support, labour market preparation, and discounted activities for children. Such support is considered very valuable, but often insufficient. –    The study does not speak to how common these experiences are, but we know from official European statistics that one in four single parents has an income below the European poverty line. And one in eight single parents with a non-EU migration background doesn't even have an income covering necessities for their family and children, says Rense Nieuwenhuis, research leader.   The importance of jobs Several participants mentioned the lack of employment as one of the strongest factors contributing to the feeling of exclusion. Especially, difficulties in combining work with other responsibilities, particularly as a single parent or when a family member is sick or has a disability. They described how they sought educational opportunities, job training, and language courses to improve their employment prospects but also how motivation and confidence are affected by recurrent rejections. One interview participant said: “It takes a lot of struggling for one person who needs help to get help. It’s not only the economical part that is hard to get, but also assistance to take care for children, sick children for example. And when you don’t get this help, the rest starts falling apart around you, the family too.” What really stood out for us was how much effort and time it takes to live on a low income. At the same time, many described the experience of a lack of understanding from society's side regarding their situation and the difficulty of accessing support when needed, say Lovisa Backman and Rense Nieuwenhuis. Read the full report here   Contact Lovisa Backman lovisa.backman@sociology.se PhD candidate at the department of sociology and the Swedish intitute of social research (SOFI) of Stockholm University. About the project The rEUsilience project is a large, international project funded by the European Commission. It is focused on understanding families’ differential capacities to respond to socio-economic and other risks and the resulting dilemmas and inequalities facing European families in a context of changing labour markets and welfare states. The project also works together with stakeholders to make recommendations at various policy levels. The rEUsilience project is coordinated by Stockholm University and Oxford University in the United Kingdom, and further includes teams from Belgium, Croatia, Poland, and Spain. In Sweden, seven focus groups were organised with in total 38 participants. The report based on these focus group interviews is publicly available, but not yet peer-reviewed.  The Stockholm team involved with the focus group interviews are: Lovisa Backman , PhD candidate at the department of sociology and the Swedish Institute for Social Research (SOFI) of Stockholm University Rense Nieuwenhuis , Associate professor at the Swedish Institute for Social Research (SOFI) of Stockholm University Mary Daly , professor in sociology and social policy at Oxford University Read more about the rEUsilience project here

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