1 / 40

Evolution of the family

Evolution of the family. A disappearing entity?. Families and households. Households: socioeconomic and physical units consisting of individuals who live together (sharing budget and meals) Families: member of hh related by blood, marriage or adoption

reece
Download Presentation

Evolution of the family

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evolution of the family A disappearing entity?

  2. Families and households • Households: socioeconomic and physical units consisting of individuals who live together (sharing budget and meals) • Families: member of hh related by blood, marriage or adoption • A family does not comprise more than one hh but many families can reside in one hh

  3. Some difficulties • Kin (blood) ties may be spread over many households are linked together (and sharing budgets and decision-making) • Individuals may spend time in different households as they grow up though they belong to one family • Birth of new household implies physical separation not just a marriage

  4. Type of households • Solitary: single individuals • Nuclear: couple + children • Extended (stem): two-three generations (example: grandparents, parents, children) • Complex: multiple (example: grandparents, two married siblings and spouses and children)

  5. Child-caring takes place within hh and families Socialization takes place within hh and families Early child influences are set by family life Demography: (mort/fert/migr) takes place within hh and families Economics: Distribution of output Division of labor Risk Insurance (women, children, elderly) Emotional support Importance of families

  6. Are families disappearing? What implications for human species? Has the new family an evolutionary advantage?

  7. The ingredients out of which we manufacture households • The distribution hh by type is a product of two ingredients: • Individual (societal) preferences (demand side) • Demographic constraints (supply side) • Mortality • Marriage - Fertility • Migration

  8. Life expectancy = 30 Prob at x =0…. .41 Prob at x =5… .30 Prob at x=10… .21 Prob at x=15… .12 Life expectancy=80 Prob at x =0…. .97 Prob at x =5… .95 Prob at x=10… .91 Prob at x=15… .85 The effects of mortality: probability of having both GP’s alive(assumptions: childbearing at 25)

  9. The effects of HIV/AIDS • Orphanhood • Widowhood • Skip-generation households: grandparents and grandchildren with no adult generations • Older female headed households

  10. What about effects of marriage or fertility? • Late marriage leads to delayed childbearing and less overlap between generations (less time with uncles and aunts) • Lower fertility: lower number of siblings and cousins

  11. Western Europe: Low marriage and late start; relative woman autonomy HH based on conjugal ties; nuclear Circulation of “servants” apprenticeship Primogeniture: young-old contracts Eastern Europe Early and universal marriage; little woman autonomy HH based on blood ties; extended Labor inputs in family farms Land partition: collective protection of elderly Hajnal’s typology: two types of families and households

  12. Line of demarcation in European fertility

  13. Influence of family types on industrialization • Modernization theory: it is industrialization that produces nuclear families • How to prove this beyond a doubt? • Hajnal: it is the prevalence of nuclear families that enables industrialization • Probably an exaggeration although lack of constraints on labor force and longer time to save could have been important contributors

  14. Relatively early and universal marriage No marital disruption except for mortality Most births within marriage Most child experience within nuclear family Marriage is late and less common Marriage is preceded and replaced by unions High levels of marital disruption High fraction of births outside marriage High fraction of child experience in “non-traditional” families A second massive transformation: from 1950 to 2000

  15. Fertility levels drop Household types change: increases in lonely households, headed by females Contracts between generations are transformed Childcaring and socialization are transformed: Emotional development Cognitive development A source of inequalities Consequences

  16. Changes in Marriage patterns

  17. Marriage timing

  18. The increase in cohabitation • Increases in prevalence due to: • Increases in marriages preceded by cohabitation • Increases of cohabitation among divorced

  19. The increase in divorce • Crude rate of divorce has had oscillations, lately a tendency to decline. Meaning? • Proportion eventually ending (by year 30) in divorce is now at 50% • Proportion ending in divorce by 5th year has remained stationary since 1985 at 20%. Among first unions there has been an increase in that probability from .30 to .34

  20. More on the increase in divorce • Large Black-White differentials • Large differentials by education

  21. Unmarried births

  22. Transformation of hh

  23. Experience of children

  24. The second demographic transition

  25. What explains this evolution? • Economic explanation: • Incentives to marriage have diminished; costs have increased • Most important is opportunity costs for women • Growth of labor force participation of women • Growth in autonomy • Welfare payments have decreased attractiveness of marriage • Many functions of family have been eroded • Insurance for elderly and children • Education • Economic production • Sources of status and success

  26. What explains this evolution? • Sociological explanation: • Secularization and pursuit of individualism • Erosion of dependence on family group for status and emotional support (emergence of social institutions) • Feedback mechanism: as trend proceeds, it transforms people’s motives • Effects of prevalence of divorce on propensity to divorce • Benefits/costs become known • Acceptability of phenomenon Effects of prevalence of divorce on propensity to divorce

More Related