new right perspective of the family

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Last updated 12:31 PM on 1/4/26
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13 Terms

1
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New Right view of the family

  • The New Right adopts a conservative viewpoint that supports traditional family values and promotes the nuclear family as the ideal foundation for a stable society

  • They believe that changes in family structures and increased state intervention have weakened the institution of the family, leading to social breakdown and moral decline

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Key beliefs of the New Right - natural gender roles

  • Men and women are seen to have biologically determined roles: men as providers and women as caregivers

  • This division is considered functional and beneficial for individuals and society

  • The nuclear family is seen as the natural and most effective structure

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Key beliefs of the New Right - rejection of welfare dependence

  • Welfare support is believed to encourage a ‘dependency culture’, discouraging personal responsibility and work

  • Benefits (e.g., child support, housing) are thought to reward lone-parent households and discourage marriage

  • Single mothers, in particular, are often portrayed as burdening the welfare system

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Key beliefs of the New Right - opposition to government interference

  • The New Right disapproves of excessive state regulation in private life (referred to as the ‘nanny state’)

  • They argue the government interferes too much in areas such as family structure, health choices, and parenting

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The ideal family model

  • The married, heterosexual nuclear family is viewed as the cornerstone of society

  • It is believed to offer discipline, moral guidance, and emotional security for children

  • The nuclear unit is seen as key to solving social issues like crime, educational failure, and dependency

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Concerns about changing family patterns - decline in marriage and rise in divorce

  • Viewed as a threat to social cohesion and lifelong commitment

  • Attributed to increasing cohabitation, secularism, and liberal attitudes toward relationships

  • Family breakdown is blamed for poor outcomes for children, especially boys raised without a father

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Concerns about changing family patterns - welfare dependency

  • Welfare is seen to discourage male responsibility and encourage ‘feckless parenting’

  • According to Murray (1990), this contributes to a ‘deviant underclass’ involved in crime and poor parenting

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Concerns about changing family patterns - labour government criticism (1997-2010)

  • The New Right claim Labour policies undermined the nuclear family by supporting same-sex relationships, encouraging mothers to work rather than stay at home, and providing sex education and free contraception to teenagers

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Views on equality and legislation

  • The New Right support equal opportunity but opposes policies that promote gender role equality

  • Laws such as the Equal Pay Act (1970) and Sex Discrimination Act (1975) are criticised for disrupting traditional family roles and promoting dual-earner households

  • Legalisation of same-sex marriage (Marriage Act 2013) and the expansion of children’s rights are seen as threats to family stability

  • They believe that too much focus on individual rights undermines parental authority and weakens the family unit

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strengths of the New Right perspective - influence on government policy

  • Influence on government policy

    • New Right views on promoting the nuclear family have shaped UK social policies, such as the Child Support Agency (1993), to ensure absent fathers contribute financially

    • Their direct influence on policymaking shows their perspective is not just theoretical but has practical significance

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weaknesses of the New Right perspective - exaggerates the impact of social policy

  • Exaggerates the impact of social policy

    • Abbott and Wallace argue the New Right overstate how much social policy harms families

      • Most policies (e.g., maternity leave, child protection) support rather than weaken families

      • The Child Support Agency promotes financial responsibility, but some say unmarried fathers are unfairly denied rights

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weaknesses of the New Right perspective - ignores family diversity

  • Ignores family diversity

    • The New Right sees the nuclear family as the only valid structure

    • This excludes lone-parent, reconstituted and same-sex families, who may struggle under policies designed for traditional families

    • Many benefits and tax systems still assume a nuclear model, limiting equal access for others

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weaknesses of the New Right perspective - promotes the idealised family model

  • Promotes an idealised family model

    • Bernardes (1997) says the New Right promotes a narrow, unrealistic view of family life

    • It ignores modern diversity and stereotypes non-nuclear families as dysfunctional

    • The assumption that children from non-nuclear families are always disadvantaged is overstated

    • In reality, children from diverse families can do well when supported properly