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Chapter Twelve
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Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

Dec 27, 2015

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Rosamond Craig
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Page 1: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

Chapter Twelve

Page 2: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

Section One

Page 3: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

A. The family is the most universal social institution

B. Definition varies from culture to culture

Page 4: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

A. Definitions1. Family: a group of people who are related by

marriage, blood, or adoption and who often live together and share economic resources

Page 5: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

2. Nuclear Family: one or both parents and their children (typical in America)

a) Family of Orientation: the nuclear family you are born into

b) Family of Procreation: the nuclear family you create

3. Extended Family: multiple generations living under one roof (grandparents, parents, children, aunts and uncles, and cousins)

Page 6: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

B. Kinship

1. Definition: a network of people who are related by marriage, birth, or adoption

2. Primary Relativesa) Members of the families of orientation and

procreationb) Mother, father, sister, brother, spouse, daughter,

and son

Page 7: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

3. Secondary Relativesa) The primary relatives of a person’s primary

relativesb) Grandparents, grandchildren, in-laws, aunts,

uncles, nephews, and nieces

4. Tertiary Relativesa) The primary relatives of a person’s secondary

relativesb) Great grandparents, great grandchildren, great

aunts, great uncles, and cousins

Page 8: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

List five of your own primary, secondary, and tertiary relatives.

Page 9: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

A. Family organization is determined by answering four questions

1. How many marriage partners may a person have?

2. Who will live with whom?3. How will family membership be determined?4. Who will make the decisions in the family?

Page 10: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

1. Monogamy is common to industrialized nations

2. Polygamy is often permitted in pre-industrial societies

a) Polygyny: a man with more than one wifeb) Polyandry: a woman with more than one

husband Primarily in parts of Asia

Page 11: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

Where a newly married couple will live

1. Patrilocality: live with or near the husband’s family

2. Matrilocality: live with or near the wife’s family

3. Bilocality: live with or near the family of choice

4. Neolocality: live apart from both sets of parents

Page 12: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

How kinship is traced

1.Patrilineal descent: trace kinship through the father’s family; property is passed from father to son

2.Matrilineal descent: trace kinship through the mother’s family; property is passed from mother to daughter

3.Bilateral descent: trace kinship through both parents; property can be inherited from either side of the family

Page 13: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

Who is in charge

1.Patriarchy: the father holds the authority2.Matriarchy: the mother holds the authority3.Egalitarian: shared authority

Page 14: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

A. Regulation of Sexual Activity1. Enforce incest taboo: forbids sex

between certain relatives—parents, siblings, grandparents, aunts/uncles, nieces/nephews

2. Patrilineal groups do not consider some on their mother’s side to be family

B. Reproduction: who can have children, how many to have, how to raise them, etc.

Page 15: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

C. Socialization: teach children how to interact with society

D. Economic and Emotional Security1. The family is the basic economic unit2. Divide labor based on gender and age3. The basic and most intimate group in society;

provides emotional support

Page 16: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

Section Two

Page 17: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

A. The majority of Americans marry at least once for romantic love

B. Most marriages are homogamous: we marry people very similar to ourselves (opposite is heterogamy)

Page 18: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

A. Family Violence1. The most devastating problem2. A problem for all groups3. In 1975, 1/3 of all interviewed had been

affected by family violence; did decrease through the 1980s

Page 19: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

B. Divorce1. 50% of marriages end in divorce2. Most common among teen marriages,

lower educated persons, and African Americans

3. Women are affected financially and psychologically; men are affected psychologically

C. Empty Nest Syndrome: when the kids leave home

D. Death of a Spouse

Page 20: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

A. Delayed Marriage1. Median age for first marriages

2. It’s again acceptable to be single3. Women are pursuing education and careers

before marriage

Men Women

1960 22 20

1990 26 23

2013 29 27

Page 21: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

B. Delayed Childbearing1. Time between marriage and childbirth

2. Sandwich Generation: people are caring for aging parents and young children at the same time

C. Childlessness1. Choose careers over family2. Wait too long and have infertility issues

1960s 15 months

1970s 27 months

Today varies

**some people choose to never marry

Page 22: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

D. Dual-earner Marriages1. Number of married women employed outside

the home

2. Women are working for personal and economic reasons

1940 < 10%

1948 22%

2000 37%

Today 61%

Page 23: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

E. One Parent Families1. Formed through separation, divorce, death of

a spouse, birth to unwed mothers, or adoption by unmarried persons

2. Represents a large number of the families in the United States today (55% of African Americans, 31% of Hispanics, and 21% of European Americans)

Page 24: Chapter Twelve. Section One A. The family is the most universal social institution B. Definition varies from culture to culture.

F. Remarriage1. 40% of those that divorce remarry; has

dropped as couples choose to cohabitate instead

2. Has led to an increase in step/blended families—close to 60% of all people have step-relatives

3. 67% of 2nd marriages and 74% of 3rd marriages end in divorce