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Chapter 13 The Family. What is “family?”  Reasonable to approach from a functionalist perspective: –A small kinship structured group with the key function.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 13 The Family. What is “family?”  Reasonable to approach from a functionalist perspective: –A small kinship structured group with the key function."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 13 The Family

2 What is “family?”  Reasonable to approach from a functionalist perspective: –A small kinship structured group with the key function of nurturant socialization of the newborn. –Kinship not necessarily biological – socially defined connections  Functions and structure very different across cultures –E.g., Atlas of World Cultures is data set of non- industrialized cultures

3 Variations in Family Life in Premodern Societies Men may have multiple wives77 Easy for a man to divorce his wife75 Couple has privacy when sleeping28 Grooms are much older than their brides70 Couples spend much leisure time together 27 Nuclear family is typical29

4 Breakdown of the family?  Compared to when?  What is you measure of “breakdown?”  History of the family not always a pretty history –High infant and child mortality –Children leave home and work at early ages –Parents often indifferent - Abuse and neglect common –Marriage typically an economic arrangement  Good mothering is an invention of modernization

5 In the “Modern Family”  Marriage is about choice, and “cupid’s arrow,” finding happiness  This kind of marriage a product of modernization and industrialization  This is a good thing, right? –Research on novelty and attraction –Idealizing romance or sexual attraction probably related to increase in divorce

6 Children – the trends  Couples marrying later, waiting longer to have kids  Family size dropping – 2 most often response to “ideal” question – mean is between 2 and 3  Children = strain in marriage – marital happiness highest before and after kids  60%+ of American mothers employed outside the home –Preschool and daycare more common –Egalitarian relationships more common (but still not the norm - Working women still carry a disproportionate % of the childrearing responsibilities)

7 Back to the breakdown question  Divorce is up – US the highest rates in the world (partly reflects high marriage rate)  Marriage not significantly down, interestingly (one might assume it is) –< 5% report current status as divorced –75% who divorce will remarry  Divorce rate difficult to calculate –Divorce rate well over 50% but…

8 Center for Disease Control (2002) % of American Women Whose First Marriage Ended in Divorce Divorced after: 5 years of marriage15 years of marriage All Women20%43% Race/Ethnicity Asian10%23% Hispanic17%42% White20%42% African American 28%55%

9 % of American Women Whose First Marriage Ended in Divorce Divorced after: 5 years of marriage15 years of marriage All Women20%43% Age at Marriage Less than 1829%59% 18–1924%49% 20–2417%36% 25 and over8%35%

10 % of American Women Whose First Marriage Ended in Divorce Divorced after: 5 years of marriage15 years of marriage All Women20%43% Family Income Low31%65% Medium19%40% High13%31%

11 % of American Women Whose First Marriage Ended in Divorce Divorced after: 5 years of marriage15 years of marriage All Women20%43% Religion Catholic17%37% Conservative Protestant 18%40% Other (non- Christian) 17%40% Liberal Protestant21%44% None27%56%

12 % of American Women Whose First Marriage Ended in Divorce Divorced after: 5 years of marriage15 years of marriage All Women20%43% Parents Not divorced17%38% Divorced26%52%

13 Stark says: High divorce rate probably indicates that marital relationship more important than it used to be  Partly saying that people expect more from marriage  Also important to not necessary equate divorce with breakdown –When all marriages stayed together not same thing as saying they were happy

14 Why Is Divorce Common?  Romance is a highly perishable commodity  The opportunities to get divorced have increased – norms have relaxed  The divorce rate is higher where a larger proportion of women work outside the home.  Where women outnumber men, divorce is high  Few children, family more mobile, extended kinship networks less common (greater isolation of the family)

15 Trent and South analysis of these factors in 66 nations  Divorce rate of country is correlated with % in workforce, modernization, sex ratios  Interestingly, proportion Catholic appears not to be a strong predictor

16 Living Together  Increased dramatically – almost ½ of 25-45 have lived together  51% of women who lived with their future spouse were divorced by the end of 15 years of marriage.  39% of women who had not lived with their spouse divorced within 15 years.  But are higher divorce rates because they lived together?

17 The One-parent Family  In 1960, 5% of all births in the U.S. were to unmarried women.  This has risen to 33% –Over 60% in African community  In Iceland and Sweden, more than half of all births are to unmarried women.  Most unwed mothers keep their children and in 90% of divorces, children remain with the mother.

18 Unmarried Motherhood Nation Births to Unmarried Mothers (%) Nation Births to Unmarried Mothers (%) Iceland65Canada26 Sweden54Netherlands19 Norway49Germany18 France39Spain11 Great Britain37Italy8 United States 33Switzerland8

19 Sweden an interesting example  Family in Sweden –Over ½ kids born to single moms –Swedes criticized for being individualistic and seeking self- fulfillment  Expanding welfare state the problem? –Government replacing family? (e.g., state supported child care with no incentives for parents to stay home)  But on the other hand, crime, drug abuse, poverty considerably lower  In other “welfare states” out of wedlock rate low (Netherlands, Germany)  And does the US do enough? – 1993 Family Medical Leave Act = 12 weeks unpaid to care for newborn or sick family member –Sweden 18 months at 90% salary

20 Effect of One Parent Families on Children  more prone to delinquency but the differences are not great.  poor parenting, regardless of the number of parents, is the primary cause of deviant behavior in children.  Biggest problem might be relationship to poverty

21 Gay and Lesbian couples  Homosexuals are raising children (previous heterosexual unions, adoption, other methods)  In this country it is illegal (1996 US Congress passed law banning) –But some states (Vermont, Hawaii) and cities (San Fran, NY) conferred some marital benefits  In 1989 Denmark became first country to lift ban. Also legal in Canada  But in Nov of 2003 Massachusetts Supreme Court rules that Gov attorneys “failed to identify any constitutionally adequate reason” to deny homosexuals the right to marry  San Fran mayor defies California law and begins to marry people  Pres Bush, initially against Constitutional Amendment, changes mind  Gay marriage a “treat to the family”?

22 Should we / can we save the “traditional family”  No question, dramatic changes since 1960 –this is point of reference for most of the “breakdown” arguments –Since 1960, % single up, divorce up, children out of wedlock up –Debate about gay marriage –Many will point to a long list of social ills that have gone up as family has deteriorated.  Cultural progressives see “traditional family” as a moral statement –There are other family models, they argue


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