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Explore the norms and patterns of marriage, descent, authority, and residential choices in different societies. Learn about the basic needs fulfilled by the family, including regulating sexual activity, reproduction, socialization, and economic security. Discover the beginnings and disruptions faced by American families, as well as trends such as delayed marriages, childbearing, and the rise of dual-earner and one-parent families.
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CHAPTER 12The Family Section 1: The Family in Cross-Cultural Perspective Section 2: The American Family
Section 1: The Family in Cross-Cultural Perspective Objectives: • Describe the norms that influence the ways in which marriage patterns are organized around the world. • Identify the basic societal needs that the institution of the family satisfies.
Section 1: The Family in Cross-Cultural Perspective Norms and Marriage Patterns Around the World • Number of marriage partners – in industrialized nations marriages are usually monogamous whereas in pre-industrial societies the normal pattern is polygyny • Residential Patterns – once individuals are married they must decide where to live
Section 1: The Family in Cross-Cultural Perspective Norms and Marriage Patterns Around the World (continued) • Descent Patterns – in some societies people trace kinship through the father’s side of the family, in others descent is traced through the mother’s side of the family or through both parents • Authority Patterns – the three basic types are patriarchy, matriarchy and egalitarian
Section 1: The Family in Cross-Cultural Perspective Basic Needs Provided by the Family • Regulation of sexual activity – enforce incest taboo which is a norm forbidding sexual relations or marriage between certain relatives • Reproduction – societies establish norms governing childbearing and child rearing
Section 1: The Family in Cross-Cultural Perspective Basic Needs Provided by the Family (continued) • Socialization – children must be taught the ways of the society into which they were born • Economic and Emotional Security – family acts as the basic economic unit in society and in most cases labor is divided on the basis of gender
Section 2: The American Family Objectives: • Explain how American families begin and describe some of the disruptions they might face. • Analyze some of the trends in American family life currently being examined by sociologists.
Section 2: The American Family Beginnings of the American Family and Disruptions • Marriage begins with courtship and marriage between either homogamous or heterogamous couples • Disruptions include family violence, divorce, empty nest, return of adult children and death of a spouse
Section 2: The American Family Sociologists Examine Trends in American Family Life • Delayed Marriages – current trend is to marry later in life and being single has become an acceptable alternative to being married • Delayed Childbearing – women are delaying childbirth to complete their education and establish a career • Childlessness – couples are making the conscious choice to remain voluntarily childless
Section 2: The American Family Sociologists Examine Trends in American Family Life (continued) • Dual-Earner Marriages – increase in the number of dual-earner marriages due to the increased number of women entering the workforce • One-Parent Families – come about in various ways such as divorce, death of a spouse, births to unwed mothers or adoption by unmarried individuals • Remarriage – the majority of people who get divorcedabout 75 percentget remarried