Types of Family

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23 Terms

1
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Single parents/Lone parents

refers to families headed by one parent caring for dependent children

  • most commonly single mothers - more likely to receive custody during divorces

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Single parents/Lone parents Trends: 1971 & 2014

Since 1971 - the percentage of these families have tripled

By 2014 - about 1 in 4 families with dependent children were lone parent families

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Single parents/Lone parents: Multiple Reasons for this Increase

  • The changing economic position of women

  • Changing social attitudes

  • Developments in reproductive technology

  • Changes in divorce laws

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Reconstituted, Blended, Step Family

at least one adult has children from a previous relationship, and these families form when these adults join together in a new partnership

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Reconstituted, Blended, Step Family Trends: 2021, 2011

1/3 of marriages now involve a remarriage

  • reflecting the rise in divorce rates

  • more men remarry than women: women’s greater dissatisfaction with marriage

  • led to more serial monogamy: where individuals divorce and then form new married or cohabitating relationships

2021: 8.8% (1.1 million) of dependent children lived in step-families, a decline from 2011 (9.7%, 1.2 million)

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Reconstituted, Blended, Step Family - Allan et al

Pointed out life in stepfamilies can be complex

  • sense of unity - two natural parents

  • children often to feel more loyalty to their natural parents: can cause disputes

Both parents’ involvement is rarely questioned - a stepparent’s role is less clear

  • children may be less willing to accept control and discipline from stepparents

  • natural parents may have reservations about the stepparent’s authority

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The Extended Family - Functionalist

The classic extended family has largely disappeared in contemporary Britain, as the isolated privatised nuclear family emerges as the form most suited to life in contemporary society

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The Extended Family: Functionalist - Willmott

Extended families continue to play a significant role in contemporary society

  • often maintain close, supportive relationships

  • “dispersed extended family”: frequently involves regular contact and mutual assistance between relatives

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The Extended Family: Functionalist - Bell

Working class and Middle class had emotional bonds with kin and relied on them for support

  • MC: more financial help

  • WC: families had more frequent contact - more domestic help from mothers to daughters

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Beanpole Family - Julia Brannen

‘long and thin’

  • it is extended vertically through 3 generations: grandparents, parents and children

  • not extended horizontally: it doesn’t involve aunts, uncles, cousins, etc

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Cultural Diversity: Black Caribbean

Families both in the UK and in the Caribbean has found considerable diversity in their cultural patterns

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Cultural Diversity: Black Caribbean - Barrow

1) The Conventional Nuclear Family (‘Christian marriage’): little different from nuclear families - typical of religious or economically successful groups

2) The Common-Law Family: frequently found among the less economically successful - an unmarried couple live together and look after children

3) The Mother Household: mothers or grandmother are the head of the household, contains no adult males - relies on the help and support of female kin living nearby: enable the head of the household to fulfil her families responsivities

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British Caribbean Families - Reynolds

Focus on female-headed households among Black Caribbean families in Britain: misleading, emphasizing their diversity and fluidity

  • female-headed households dominate in Jamaica

  • nuclear families are more common in Barbados and Antigua

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British Caribbean Families: Visiting Relationships - Reynolds

Visiting Relationships: increase family diversity - not often still playing an active parental role

  • sometimes maintained for social security benefits: step towards stable, cohabiting relationships or marriage

  • some women: value the independence these visiting relationships behind

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Cultural Diversity: British Asians - Qureshi, Charsley & Shaw

Historically seen as having low rates of divorce, lone parenthood, and separation

  • Pakistani families increased from 10% in 1991 to 17% in 2011 - indicate trend towards higher divorce and separation rates

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Cultural Diversity: British Asians - Qureshi

First-generation Pakistani migrants: strongly opposed to divorce, often concealing marital issues

Older Migrants: challenges like spousal infidelity and low income - divorce was rare: occurred in cases of domestic violence or fertility

Younger British Pakistanis: Cultural differences and long visa waits causes marital conflict - only men could initiate divorce, eventually women concluded it was possible (Qur’an)

  • most parents still support arranged marriages: increase possibility of divorce and remarriage for children

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Sexual Diversity - Stonewall

The campaign for lesbian, gay and bisexual rights

  • estimates that about 5 to 7% of the adult population today: same-sex relationships

Impossible to judge whether this represents an increase because in the past, stigma and illegality: likely to be hidden

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Sexual Diversity: Policies

  • Decriminalisation of male homosexual acts (two consenting adults over 20)

  • 2001: Age of Consent

  • 2002: Adoption and Children Act

  • 2004: Civil Partnership Act

  • 2014: Same-Sex Marriage Legalised

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Sexual Diversity - Weeks

Increased social acceptance may explain a trend towards same-sex cohabitation and stable relationships that resemble those found among heterosexual

  • ‘chosen families’ - offer the same security and stability as heterosexual families

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Sexual Diversity - Einasdottir

Many gays and lesbians welcome the opportunity to have their partnerships legally recognised

  • others fear it limits the flexibility and negotiability of relationships - rather than adopt what they see as heteronormativity

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One Person Households Trends: 2013, 2033

2013 - nearly 3 in 10 households were single-person households

2033 - over 30% of the adult population will be single

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LAT Trends

More young adults are staying with parents due to increased education years and financial pressures

  • decline in marriage rates and people marrying later

  • “creative singlehood” - choosing to live alone

  • older widows are single - lack of available partners

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LAT Trends - Duncan and Phillips

British Social Attitudes survey - found that about 1 in 10 adults are “living apart together”

  • reflects a trend towards less formal relationships and personal choice

  • public attitudes towards LATs are favourable