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The Family and Human Sexuality. Chapter 13. Social Institutions. Organized patterns of beliefs and behavior that are centered on basic social needs. Cultural universal. Functionalist View. 5 major tasks Replacing personnel Teaching new recruits
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The Family and Human Sexuality Chapter 13
Social Institutions • Organized patterns of beliefs and behavior that are centered on basic social needs. • Cultural universal
Functionalist View • 5 major tasks • Replacing personnel • Teaching new recruits • Producing and distributing goods and services • Preserving order • Providing and maintaining a sense of purpose
Family • A set of people who are related by blood, marriage (or some other agreed-upon relationship), or adoption who share the primary responsibility for reproduction and caring for members of society.
Family Variations • Nuclear – a married couple and their unmarried children • Extended – a family unit that includes parents and children, as well as other kin • Accordion – composition changes based on changing circumstances
Marriage • A legally sanctioned relationship, usually involving economic cooperation, as well as sexual activity, and childbearing.
Who to Marry? • Endogamy – marriage between people of the same social category • Exogamy – refers to marriage between people of different social categories
How Many to Marry? • Monogamy- marriage uniting two partners • Polygamy – marriage that unites three or more people • Polygyny- a man with multiple wives • Polyandry – a woman with multiple husbands • Serial monogamy – having several monogamous marriages over a lifetime
Courtship and Mate Selection • Aspects of Mate Selection • Incest taboo: • Homogamy: Conscious or unconscious tendency to select mate with personal characteristics similar to one’s own
Kinship • The state of being related to others
Descent • Refers to the system by which members of a society trace kinship over generations
Descent Patrilineal – kinship traced through father’s side of the family
Descent • Matrilineal – kinship traced through mother’s side of the family
Descent • Bilateral – kinship traced through both the father’s side and mother’s side
Residential Patterns • Patrilocality – living with or near the husband’s family • Matrilocality – living with or near the wife’s family • Neolocality – living separate from both families
Authority • Patriarchy • Male decision making • Matriarchy • Female decision making • Egalitarian • Spouses are equal
Structural-Functional Analysis • Family performs many vital tasks • Ogburn (1934) • Reproduction • Protection • Socialization • Regulation of sexual behavior • Affection and companionship • Provision of social status
Conflict Analysis • Family perpetuates inequality • Property and inheritance • Patriarchy • Race and ethnicity
Interactionist Analysis • How individuals share and experience family life • Building emotional bonds • Building a way to view the world and interact
Divorce • Causes of divorce • Individualism • Romantic love subsides • Women less dependent on men • Divorce is socially acceptable • Legally easier to get
Figure 39-1: U.S. Households by Family Type, 1940 – 2010 Source: Bureau of the Census 2010b:Table HH1.
Alternate Family Forms • One-parent families • Cohabitation • Gay and lesbian couples • Singlehood
Transition to Parenthood • Little anticipatory socialization • Only limited learning during pregnancy • Transition quite abrupt • Society lacks clear and helpful guidelines for successful parenthood
Child-Rearing Patterns • Adoption • “Transfer of the legal rights, responsibilities, and privileges of parenthood” to a new legal parent or parents • Functionalist: government has a strong interest in encouraging adoption • At any given time, around half a million children in the United States are living in foster care
Child-Rearing Patterns • Dual-Income Families • Rise due to economic need, coupled with a desire to pursue careers
Child-Rearing Patterns • Single-parent families: Only one parent is present to care for children • Households headed by single fathers more than quadrupled from 1987 to 2011
Child-Rearing Patterns • Stepfamilies • Approximately 45% of all people in U.S. will marry, divorce, and remarry
Human Sexuality • Sexuality not limited to physical behaviors • Includes beliefs, values, and social norms that collectively govern its expression • Way human sexuality sanctioned differs widely geographically and historically • Sexual attitudes and practices change over time
Human Sexuality • Labeling and Human Sexuality • Definition of deviant sexual behavior varied significantly over time and from one culture to another • Social stigma of homosexuality • Transgendered persons: people whose current gender identity does not match their physical identity at birth • Transvestites: cross-dressers who wear clothing of opposite sex