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Family

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A social institution found in all societies that unites people into cooperative ... activity maintenance of kinship order and property rights, incest taboos ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Family


1
Family
2
Basic Concepts
  • Family
  • A social institution found in all societies that
    unites people into cooperative groups to oversee
    the bearing and raising of children
  • Kinship
  • A social bond, based on blood, marriage, or
    adoption
  • Family Unit
  • A social group of two or more people, related by
    blood, marriage, or adoption, who usually live
    together
  • Families of orientation
  • The family you are born into
  • Families of procreation
  • The family you form in order to have or adopt
    children
  • Families of affinity
  • People with or without blood ties who feel that
    they belong together and want to define
    themselves as a family

3
Families Global Variations
  • Extended family
  • Family unit that includes parents and children as
    well as other kin
  • Also called consanguine families
  • Nuclear family
  • Also called conjugal family
  • Composed of one or two parents and their children
  • The predominant family form

4
Marriage Patterns
  • Marriage
  • Legally sanctioned relationship, usually
    involving economic cooperation, as well as sexual
    activity and childbearing, that people expect to
    be enduring
  • Illegitimacy out of wedlock children
  • Matrimony the condition of motherhood

5
Marriage Patterns
  • Endogamy
  • Marriage between people of the same social
    category
  • Limited opportunities for marriage
  • Exogamy
  • Marriage between people of different social
    categories can help form alliances
  • Marriage partners
  • Monogamy marring one other person
  • Serial monogamy monogamy divorce remarriage
  • Polygamy marrying three or more people
  • Polygyny marrying more than one female
  • Polyandry marrying more than one male

6
Residential Patterns
  • PATRILOCALITY
  • With or near the husbands family
  • MATRILOCALITY
  • With or near the wifes family
  • NEOLOCALITY
  • Setting up house apart from both families

7
DESCENT
  • How members of a society trace kinship over
    generations
  • Importance includes passing on property and
    recognition as a family member
  • Three types
  • Patrilineal descent tracing kinship through men
  • Matrilineal descent tracing kinship through
    women
  • Bilateral descent tracing kinship through both
    men and women

8
Structural-Functional Analysis of the Family
  • The family serves basic functions
  • Socialization creating well-integrated members
    of society
  • Regulation of sexual activity maintenance of
    kinship order and property rights, incest taboos
  • Social placement - births to married couples are
    preferred in societies
  • Material and emotional security home can be a
    haven for people
  • Critical evaluation
  • Glosses over great diversity of family life, how
    other institutions are taking over its roles
    negative aspects like patriarchy and family
    violence

9
Social-Conflict Analysis of the Family
  • The family perpetuates social inequality
  • Property and inheritance concentrates wealth
    and reproduces class structure
  • Patriarchy to know their heirs men must control
    women who still bear the brunt of child rearing
    and housework duties
  • Racial ethnic inequality endogamous marriage
    shores up racial hierarchies
  • Critical evaluation
  • Ignores that families carry out functions not
    easily accomplished by other means

10
Micro-Level Analysis of the Family
  • Symbolic-Interaction
  • Opportunities for sharing activities helps build
    emotional bonds
  • Social-Exchange
  • Courtship marriage as a negotiation to make the
    best deal on their partner
  • Critical evaluation
  • Misses the bigger picture, family life is similar
    for people in similar social backgrounds and
    varies in predictable ways

11
STAGES OF FAMILY LIFE
  • Courtship
  • Arranged marriages versus romantic love
  • Homogamy marriage between people with same
    social traits
  • Settling in
  • Ideal vs. Real marriage
  • Childrearing
  • Industrialization transformed children from
    assets to liabilities
  • Later life
  • Empty nest
  • Sandwich generation spends as many years caring
    for their children as for their aging parents

12
POWER, GENDER, AND MENTAL HEALTHDIFFERENT LEVELS
OF DEPRESSION IN MARRIAGES CANBE IDENTIFIED IN
VARIOUS MARRIAGE TYPES
  • Conventional
  • Husband employed while wife stays home
  • Low to moderate depression for both partners
  • Strained conventional
  • Wife joins husband in labor force out of
    necessity, and does housework at home
  • Moderate depression for wife, but high depression
    for husband who feels like a failure

13
U.S. Families
  • Social Class
  • Ethnicity and Race
  • American Indian Families
  • Latino Families
  • African American Families
  • Ethnically and Racially Mixed Marriages
  • Gender

14
DIVORCE
  • In the U.S. nine out of ten persons will marry.
    Four out of these marriages will end in divorce.
    Factors include
  • Individualism on the rise
  • Romantic love often subsides
  • Women are less dependent upon men
  • Many of todays marriages are stressful
  • Divorce is socially acceptable
  • Legally, a divorce is easier to get

15
REMARRIAGE
  • Four out of five people who divorce remarry, most
    within five years.
  • Remarriage often creates blended families,
    composed of children and some combination of
    biological parents and stepparents.
  • Although blended families require that members
    adjust to their new circumstances, they offer
    both young and old the change to relax rigid
    family roles.

16
Violence Family
  • Against women
  • Of 791,000 reported accounts of abuse between
    intimate partners, 85 are against women
  • 32 percent of all women murdered are the victims
    of their partners, or ex-partners
  • All states have marital rape laws, half have
    stalking laws on the books
  • Against children
  • 3 million children a year are abused, 1 million
    of these involve serious harm including 1,100
    deaths
  • Abusers are as likely to be women as men with no
    simple stereotype

17
Alternative Family Forms
  • One-parent families
  • 28 percent of U.S. Families with children under
    18 have only one parent in the household
  • 75 percent of these families are headed by women
  • Cohabitation
  • 10 percent of all couples, or 5.6 million, only
    50 decide to marry
  • Gay and lesbian couples
  • Although some European countries accept same-sex
    marriage the U.S. Congress has banned it
  • Singlehood
  • In 1960 28 of U.S. Women aged 20-24 were single,
    by 2003 the number had risen to 75

18
New Reproductive Technologies
  • 1978, test-tube baby.
  • In vitro fertilization, is where doctors unite a
    womans egg and a mans sperm in glass rather
    than in a womans body.
  • The ethics of new reproductive technologies.

19
FAMILIES AND PREDICTIONS
  • Divorce rates remain high
  • More equality between sexes
  • Family life will be variable
  • All kinds of units will be called families
  • Men will continue to play a limited role in child
    rearing
  • Many dads will remain absent from household
    scenes
  • Economic changes will impact families and reform
    marriage
  • Less quality time as work demands more from
    parents
  • New reproductive technologies
  • Ethical concerns about what can and what should
    be done
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