Social Institutions:
The Family
Chapter
14: Sociology, Schaefer, 1995-2012
See
also, Michael Kerl's MARRIAGE
& FAMILY PROCESSES
The
typical American family?
(Or, this?)(families in 1960 vs. 2015)
The Crisis
of Change
- Pre-marital sex
- Nearly 36% of births-unmarried
mothers (1 in 10 1970)
- ~50% of all children
will spend some time in a single parent family (85% African-American).
1995: 21% of White families, 36% of Hispanic families, 64% of Black
families)
- ~20% of pregnancies --abortions
- Increasing rates of unmarried
couples (up 6x in the 1960s, up 6x 1970-1991; number of couples doubled
from 1980-1993, rate has double for those over age of 50) (census data)
- Divorce
rate (calculate current
(2014) rate=divorces per 1000/marriages 1000). Showing signs of decline, except for those over 50.
- Increasing number of
people remaining single
longer (1 in 4 households). Still fewer than 10% never marry. Age
at marriage (and "cougars") (local
copy) (NY
Times article: 10/15/09)(see
also) (Who
marries when?)(Knot Yet: Benefits and Costs of Delayed Marriage)
- Growing number of "childless"
(child-free?) couples (follow-up).
20% of women in their 30s state that they will never have children.
Married couples without children: over 50% of married couples are couples
without children at home, 2010) (nearly 20%
of American women--no children at 44--up from 10% in 1970).
- Multigenerational
Families (full
report)
- Test tube babies
- Working mothers
- Inter-racial
Marriages? (Marrying
Out) (map,
2008)(Who
is marrying whom? NYTimes, 2011)(The Rise of Intermarriage, Pew Social and Demographic Trends, 2/16/2012)
- Gay
Marriages? (children
with same-sex parents)(see also)(June 26, 2015 Same-sex marriage legal in all 50 states)
- Networked
Families (full
report, local copy)
- Decline
of Marriage and Rise of New Families (full
report, local
copy)
- 2011: 39% of Americans agree that marriage is becoming obsolete.
- 2014 report: Barely Half of U.S. Adults Are Married – A Record Low (as of 2010)
- 144 Years of Marriage (Washington Post, June 23, 2015)
- 2016: Six Facts about American Fathers, Pew Research Center Fact Tank 6/16/2016.
- 2017: 5 Facts on Love and Marriage in America, Pew Research Center Fact Tank, 3/13/2017.
- 2017: Americans See Men as the Financial Providers, Even as Women's Contributions Grow, Pew Research Center Fact Tank, 9/21/2017.
- 2017: The share of Americans living without a partner has increased, especially among young adults, Pew Research Center Fact Tank, 10/11/2017.
What is a
Family?
Dimensions
of the Family
Number of Partners
Mate
Selection
- endogamy
(yet)
- exogamy
- incest
taboo
- homogamy (online dating)
- propinquity
- Romantic Love: functions
and dysfunctions
- Courtship (Marriage
Market): Arranged vs. Games and Symbolic Interaction, Labeling.
- The Rise of Intermarriage, Pew Social and Demographic Trends, 2/16/2012
Residence
Patterns
Emotional and Economic
Support
Mobility and Independence
Authority Patterns
Descent
and Inheritance
Determining Kinship
- Patrilineal
- Matrilineal
- Bilateral
Form
Looking
Theoretically at the Family
- Dominance of men over
women-Engels: first class antagonism (2005: 1 stay-at-home dad for every 38 stay-at-home moms)
- Women as property
- Social Conflict: Violence
as a norm, stress, lack of community, sexism, intergenerational transmission.
No single theory is adequate to explain complex dynamic.
- Domestic
Violence (Gelles
on "Family
Violence")
- Spouse abuse
- Child abuse
- Parent abuse
- Sibling Abuse
- Murder
Interactionism
- Self-fulfillment and
self-definition
- The Dyad
- Authority versus intimacy:
communication between family members
- Social exchange: marriage
and courtship negotiations, changing levels of assessment: Females- from physical
attractiveness to financial resources (see: Macionis, "Sociology"
6th edition, 1997; and Blau, "Exchange and Power in Social Life,"
1964)
- Variation in interaction in the family--two-parent/single parent/step-parents.
- Networked
Families (full
report, local copy)
- Multigenerational
Families (full
report)
- Six Facts about American Fathers, Pew Research Center Fact Tank 6/16/2016.
Trends, Patterns
and Evolving Forms
Parenting and grandparents
- Critical job, no qualifications.
Problem of anticipatory socialization. Consensus on child rearing (Corporal
punishment).
- Raising Kids and Running a Household: How Working Parents Share the Load (local copy)(Pew Research Center: Social and Demographic Trends)(November 4, 2015)
- Extension of parenthood--adult
children coming home
- Living longer--More
Grandparents
- Children raised
by grandparents
(10% in 2010)(full report)
- Types:
- Recreational care
givers
- Symbolic (geographical
separation)
- Active-everyday
- Divorce and custodial
care
Adoption
Dual
career families
- Incomes: $53,600 vs. $65,200 (2014)
- 3.6 million couples Living apart (1 out of every 33)(2007)
Class
variations
- Tradition vs survival
- Authoritative vs Authoritarian
- Growing homogenization
Racial
and ethnic variations
Divorce
- Trends
- rate 1992: 51.4%,
rate of remarriage-70% of those under 35, 50% within 3 years
- 2008: "50-State
Tour" (49.3%)
- Stations: emotional,
legal, economic, coparental, community, psychic
- Stages
of Divorce
- Factors predicting a
higher probability of Divorce:
- Young age
- Short acquaintance
- Short engagement
- Parental and friend
disapproval
- Dissimilar backgrounds
- Low level of education
- Conflicting role
expectations
- Urban.
- Inheriting
Divorce
- Is Divorce Contagious?
Cohabitation:
- Tremendous increases
- Mead--individual marriage
and parental marriage.
- Practice marriage?
Singlehood:
- High age of first marriage
- Many remaining single
7-10%
- Choice
and reality
- Freedom, excitement,
career.
Gay
families:
Child
free marriages
Single-parent
families
Networked
Families (full
report, local copy)
- Industrialization and
the Transformation of the Household: Gender roles. family as unit of
consumption vs. unit of production. Work outside of the home.
- Shift from family responsibility
to External responsibility: Rise of other Institutions. Income levels
for families with children have declined, DINKs, Government Bureaucracy,
Costs of education, After-school and Summer programs, decline of parental
authority, shift in locus of socialization
- Schools and Community
(schools as "constructed" institutions, schools as unable to fulfill
all the demands of the socialization process).
- Schools provide: opportunities,
demands, and rewards. Families/communities provide attitudes, efforts, and
conceptions of self.
- Social Capital
versus Individual Capital.
- Recent
study by the Center on Education Policy (2007) suggests type of school,
private vs. public, has little effect on student success.
- The State of Unequal Educational Opportunity: The Coleman Report 50 Years Later. Edited by Margot I. Jackson and Susan L. Moffitt. Sage. The ANNALS November 2017.
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to Conflict Theory
URL: http://www.umsl.edu/~keelr/010/family.html
Owner: Robert O. Keel rok@umsl.edu
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