Periodic Reporting for period 1 - SINGLETON (Singleton trajectories. Understanding new life course paths of young adults.)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2023-03-01 al 2025-08-31
By combining quantitative longitudinal surveys, qualitative interviews, and machine learning-based discourse analysis, this study will provide an interdisciplinary perspective on singlehood that bridges demography, sociology, and developmental psychology. The expected impact of this multifaceted approach is threefold. First, scientifically, it will consolidate Singlehood Studies as a new field of research, shifting perspectives on romantic relationships and life trajectories in (young) adulthood. Second, at a societal level, it will provide policymakers with insights into the broader implications of rising singleness, housing, labour markets, and social support systems. Lastly, it will address and challenge stigmatisation and biases against singlehood, fostering a more inclusive perspective on diverse life choices. As such, by challenging the traditional assumption that all relationship trajectories ultimately lead to long-term commitment, the project will aid in recognising singleness as a legitimate and structured life course pathway. Through its innovative methodology and interdisciplinary approach, the SINGLETON project thus aims to fundamentally reshape the academic and societal discourse surrounding modern relationship trajectories.
The second main activity within the SINGLETON project pertains to the preparation of multi-wave, multi-actor and multi-method data collection among (young) adults in Belgium. Data collection for the quantitative online survey of the first wave commenced mid-March, followed by the launch of the qualitative data collection mid-April. The online survey was finalised at the end of June, after which data cleaning commenced. This entailed checks of the entire dataset, including missing values, ID variable construction, and anonymisation. In September, the coding of the open-ended questions was completed and logged. The finalisation of the dataset and related documents is planned by the end of 2025, including the metadata, technical reporting, and codebook translation. The qualitative data collection is ongoing, with finalisation planned at the end of November.
Concurrently, preparations for the second wave of data collection are underway. This entails adapting both the online survey and qualitative questionnaires from the first wave, issuing new participation invitations to the respondents, and updating the sample information from the Belgian National Register.
Second, a particular focus has been placed on mastering novel and advanced research methodologies such as AI modelling and Textual Analytics. These efforts have led to the development of a FLAMES (Flanders' Training Network for Methodology and Statistics) course on AI in qualitative research. Next, various guest lectures have been provided on the topic of singlehood within the course Family Sociology, underlining the importance attached to public communication. In this respect, interviews have also been conducted with local newspapers (De Standaard, De Morgen, Het Laatste Nieuws) on legal stigmatisation of singles in terms of inheritance, the gendered struggles surrounding highly educated single women’s search for a partner, and the relationship landscape in Belgium. Finally, collaborations have been formed with artists and media professionals, as well as (inter)national singlehood policy advocates, such as Australian writer and activist Donna Ward and Belgian politician Carla Dejonghe, who aid in translating academic insights to a broader audience while increasing the (policy) impact of the project.