Changing family patterns and family diversity - families and households

Cards (40)

  • Family diversity
    Changing patterns and types of families
  • Questions on the increase in divorce often specify a time period - e.g. the 1960s or to the present day
  • Although the law gives people more freedom to divorce, this doesn't necessarily lead to even higher divorce rates
  • Social factors may be more important than legal ones in explaining the rise in divorce
  • The decline in the influence of religion on society (secularisation) has contributed to less stigma around divorce
  • 40% of marriages now end in divorce - six times more than 50 years ago
  • Reasons for the increase in divorce
    • Legal changes
    • Less stigma
    • Secularisation
    • Higher expectations of marriage
    • Women's financial independence
    • Feminist explanations
    • Modernity and individualisation
  • Legal changes in the 19th and 20th centuries made divorce easier, widening the grounds between the sexes
  • Stigma around divorce has declined rapidly since the 1960s, making divorce more acceptable
  • Secularisation - the decline in the influence of religion on society - has contributed to the decline in stigma around divorce
  • Functionalists
    Argue that higher expectations of marriage today are leading to higher divorce rates
  • Functionalists are optimistic, arguing that the high rate of re-marriage shows people haven't rejected marriage as such
  • Women's financial independence and availability of lone parent welfare benefits have made women less economically dependent on their husbands and more able to afford divorce
  • Feminist explanations argue that divorce is mainly sought by women due to dissatisfaction with patriarchal oppression
  • Modernity and individualisation
    Encourage both sexes to pursue their own self-interests, causing conflicts within couples and leading to more divorce
  • There are now fewer first marriages, due to several factors including changing attitudes and the availability of alternatives like cohabitation
  • Women's economic independence gives them freedom not to marry, and the impact of feminism means some women see marriage as a patriarchal institution
  • Rising divorce rates may put some people off marrying
  • Other trends in marriages
    • More re-marriages
    • Later marriages
    • Fewer church weddings
    • Increase in cohabitation
  • Cohabitation
    An alternative to marriage, seen by some as a more equal relationship
  • There is greater acceptance and legal equality for gay marriage and same-sex relationships
  • Nearly half of all children are now born outside of marriage, due to the rise in cohabitation and lone parenthood
  • Lone-parent families now account for a quarter of all families, partly due to increased divorce and the decline of the traditional nuclear family
  • Reconstituted or stepfamilies are increasing due to divorce and remarriage, and account for 10% of all families with children
  • Ethnic differences in family patterns
    • British South Asian families had high marriage and fertility rates, low cohabitation and divorce rates, more three-generation households, and strong obligations to extended family
    • White British families had lower marriage and fertility rates, later marriage, and higher cohabitation and divorce rates
    • Black British Caribbean families had lower marriage and higher lone parenthood rates
  • Despite the trend towards modern individualism, considerable diversity remains in family structures and practices
  • The extended family still exists today as a 'dispersed extended family' where relatives maintain frequent contact
  • Many people still feel obligations to their wider extended kin, with reciprocity being an important principle
  • Functionalism
    A sociological perspective that sees the nuclear family as the ideal, with a division of labour based on gender
  • The New Right
    A political perspective that opposes family diversity and sees the conventional nuclear family as the only normal and desirable family type
  • The New Right blames lone-parent families for creating a 'dependency culture' and producing social problems
  • Chester's 'neo-conventional family'
    Although there is some increased diversity, the nuclear family remains the dominant and aspired-to family form
  • The Rapoports' five types of diversity

    Organisational, cultural, class, life cycle, and generational
  • Postmodernism and family diversity
    Greater individualism and choice have led to more instability and variability in family forms
  • The individualisation thesis
    Individual self-interest now governs our actions, undermining the traditional patriarchal family
  • The negotiated family
    Families are now more equal but less stable, with more emphasis on individual needs rather than those of the family
  • The connectedness thesis
    Traditional norms and inequalities still limit people's choices, and we make decisions about relationships within a social context, not as disembedded individuals
  • There are now about six times as many divorces as in the 1960s, while the number of marriages has fallen by about 100,000 a year and the number cohabiting has risen
  • The average age at first marriage has risen to over 30, and there are more re-marriages
  • Only about 20% of weddings now take place in church