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Family Diversity

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Family Diversity Blended or reconstituted families Lone parent Same sex Ethnic diversity Cohabitation Singlehood – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Family Diversity


1
Family Diversity
  • Blended or reconstituted families
  • Lone parent
  • Same sex
  • Ethnic diversity
  • Cohabitation
  • Singlehood

2
Reconstituted or Blended Families
  • One form of family diversity which moves away
    from traditional notions of the family is the
    step-family now more commonly known as
    the reconstituted or blended family.
  • Allan Crow (2001) research found seven out of
    ten families with dependent children may be
    described as married-couple families these do not
    all conform to the stereotype of the normal
    family as some are step-families or reconstituted
    families. Step-families with dependent children
    account for 7 of all families and there is
    evidence of an increase in the proportion of
    step-families in recent years (p289).

3
Reconstituted or Blended Families
  • Carol Smart, co-author of  The Changing
    Experience of Childhood, has conducted research
    with many children whose families have broken up
  • Smart found, it was impossible for the
    step-parent to become a substitute mother or
    father. They tended to assume instead a
    non-authoritarian, non-disciplinarian,
    companionship role. A new etiquette is emerging

4
Reconstituted or Blended Families
  • Dorit Braun of Parentline Plus says that blended
    families often take 10 years to bed down.
  • But its certainly true that the step role
    sometimes a sort of uncle, father, big brother
    is shifting and uncertain with discipline being
    the most fraught and visible example of the
    unease.
  • As one of the interviewees said, Its all tied
    up with will they like you or not? The advice
    (for what its worth, when children are being
    really infuriating) is to let the biological
    parent do the disciplining and, if shes not
    there, to say, I dont think your mother would
    like you to do that.

5
Reconstituted or Blended Families
  • Bedell 2002 also found there are plenty of other
    difficulties that intact families dont have
  • How do you handle birthdays?
  • What do you all do at Christmas?
  • When there are competing rituals at Christmas
    stockings or pillowcases whose do you jettison?
  • How is everyone going to react when theres a new
    baby arrives, who really is a child of this
    family?

6
Reconstituted or Blended Families
  • Fact file on blended/reconstituted familys
  • 10 of all British children lives with one birth
    parent and a step parent
  • Over 50 of children who live in two different
    households take a positive view of their divided
    lives
  • 6 of all families with children are step
    families
  • Two fifths of all marriages are re-marriages
  • 25 of children have experienced their parents
    divorce. Over 50 of them will find themselves
    members of a stepfamily when their mothers and
    fathers go on to find new partners.

7
Lone parent families
  • One-parent families only appeared in official
    documentation in the 1960s.
  • Of course, arrangements whereby one parent brings
    up a child have always existed but historically
    it was a phenomenon known by different
    stigmatised names
  • e.g. unmarried mother, fatherless family and
    regarded from different perspectives (e.g. as
    pathological).

8
Lone parent families
  • Due to this social-shift an official definition
    of a lone-parent family exists to offset any
    social stigma
  • A mother or father living without a partner
    (either married or cohabiting), with their
    dependent children. The child must be under 19
    and in full-time education.

9
Lone parent families
  • However, the experience of lone parenthood
    remains full of ambiguities
  • Hardey Crows research found lone parenting is
    associated with tough economic circumstances and
    social marginalisation
  • For example single parent households are the most
    likely to be in arrears on one or more household
    bills, mortgage or nonmortgage borrowing
    commitment 31 (Gingerbread, 2013).

10
Lone parent families
  • Nevertheless the following official statistics
    (January 2012, Office for National Statistics)
    show the extent to which Britains seen an
    increasing rise in the number of single-parent
    families
  • In 1971 just 8 per cent of families with children
    were single parent families
  • In 1998 24 per cent of families with children
    were single parent families
  • In 2011 26 per cent of families with children
    were single parent families

11
Lone parent families
  • For New Right politicians lone parents remain a
    problem
  • Rt Hon Iain Duncan Smith MP in 2004 blamed the
    rise of lone parent families
  • He said In the fourth largest economy in the
    world, too many people lived in dysfunctional
    homes, trapped on benefits. Too many children
    were leaving school with no qualifications or
    skills to enable them to work and prosper.

12
Lone parent families
  • The reasons for the increase in lone-parenthood
    are varied.
  • Allan and Crow (2001) have identified three
    factors
  • 1. is an increase in marital breakdown.
  • 2. a rise in births to unmarried mothers
  • 3. societys acceptance of family diversity.

13
Lone parent families
  • Other sociologists have identified other causes
    of lone parenthood by separating the different
    causes between married and non-married
    individuals.
  • For married couples the causes of lone parenthood
    tends to fall into three main categories
  • 1 - divorce 2 separation 3 - death of a
    spouse
  • While the cause of lone parenthood for
    individuals who have never been married tends to
    be due to
  • 1 - may have been living with the parent of the
    child when the child was born, but then their
    relationship terminated
  • 2 - a relationship was formed after the birth of
    the child, but the relationship terminated a
    period of time later

14
Same Sex Families
  • There has been a relatively small but gradually
    increasing number of children brought up in same
    sex families (gay and lesbian families). However
    the number of children brought up in same sex
    families is very small. 
  • The Office of National Statistics noted that less
    than 1 of dependent children lived in civil
    partnership or same sex cohabiting couple
    families in 2012

15
Same Sex Families
  • In 2009 Stonewalls research found
  • Many children of gay parents see their families
    as special and different because all families are
    special and different, though some feel that
    their families are a lot closer than other
    peoples families
  • Some children feel that their family is a bit
    different if they have lesbian or gay parents but
    this is something to celebrate, not worry about
  • Other children do recognise that children with
    gay parents are less common than other sorts of
    families, but dont feel this means that their
    families are any different to other peoples
    families because of it.

16
Same Sex Families
  • Macionis and Plummer show how new reproductive
    technologies have helped to extend the variety of
    family relationships. Its worth noting
    reproductive technologies are used by
    heterosexual couples as well as single and older
    women
  • Stacey (1996) argues that gay and lesbian
    families represent an ideal model of postmodern
    kinship because their conscious efforts to devise
    intimate relationships are freed from the
    constraints and the benefits of traditional
    patterns of family life

17
Ethnicity
  • Ethnically diverse family structures
  • Asian most Asian households are built on the
    nuclear model though they do tend to encourage
    extended family forms. Cohabitation is rare, and
    marrying young is normal though sometimes
    arranged
  • African-Caribbean single parenthood is very
    high in this ethnic group. In 2001 48 of
    African-Caribbean families were headed by lone
    parents (women), they also have the lowest
    marriage rate and relative divorce rate.
  • Multi-cultural families there has been an
    increasing number of partnerships between people
    from different ethnic groups. Beck-Gernsheim 2002
    studies have found there can be conflict between
    the ethnic groups of origin yet she also found
    that multicultural marriages help break down
    social barriers

18
Ethncity
  • Bangladeshi and Pakistani family size has reduced
    to an average of about three children per family,
    still higher than other groups
  • Chinese fertility is particularly low, partly
    because one third of the Chinese population are
    students
  • is less difference in family size between ethnic
    groups than in past decades
  • People from mixed race backgrounds are the
    youngest ethnic group in England and Wales

19
Cohabitation
  • New figures from the UK Census have revealed that
    more and more couples are living together without
    being married and/or before getting married
  • In 1994, the earliest date for which figures are
    available, 75 of couples marrying in a civil
    ceremony lived together before getting married.
    This percentage increased steadily to 88 in 2011
  • The number of dependent children living in these
    opposite sex cohabiting couple families also
    increased, from 0.9 million to 1.8 million
  • The reasons are as follows

20
Cohabitation
  • sexual relations cohabiting is no longer
    associated with living in sin (social stigma)
    making cohabitation socially acceptable
  • choice people (particularly young couples)
    choose to cohabit in order to test their
    relationship
  • changing roles of women greater economic
    independence has meant women are able to choose
    their relationships
  • effective contraception from 1967 onwards
    reliable contraception was made available on the
    NHS. This meant it made it possible for couples
    to cohabit without worrying about becoming
    pregnant
  • parental freedom the 1960s saw a gradual
    relaxation in parents towards their children. The
    formal discipline of the past slowly eroded and
    so eventually parents allowed their children to
    live together without being married

21
Cohabitatation
  • education 1960s saw a growth in Higher
    Education, this meant more children were given
    more freedom than ever before
  • building societies started lending money to
    unmarried couples in the late 1970s and early
    1980s as the social stigma waned
  • divorce theres increasingly less stigma
    associated with divorce, consequently marriage as
    a union between couples is not as socially strong
  •  increasing divorce rates makes marriage is less
    of an aspiration for people which has added to
    the currency of cohabitation

22
Singlehood
  • According to the Office for National
    Statistics the 2011 Census revealed just under a
    third of households consisted of one person in
    2011
  • proportionally this has remained unchanged since
    2001 although the number of people living alone
    has increased by 0.6 million.
  • The composition of singlehood shows 2.5million
    between 45 and 64 living in their own home alone
    with the number of men on living on their own has
    increased far more than women

23
Singlehood
  • So what is driving this growth?
  • American sociologist Eric Kinenberg research
    identified the following points
  • more people live alone than ever before is that
    they can afford to
  • the rise stems from the cultural change that
    Émile Durkheim, called the cult of the individual
    - according to Durkheim, this cult grew out of
    the transition from traditional rural communities
    to modern industrial cities.
  • divorce once justified a persons decision to
    stay in an empty-shell marriage -today if someone
    is not fulfilled by their marriage, they have to
    justify staying in it, because there is cultural
    pressure to be good to ones self.

24
Singlehood
  • communications revolution has allowed people to
    experience the pleasures of social life even when
    theyre living alone
  • young solitaires actively reframe living alone as
    a mark of distinction and success -they use it as
    a way to invest time in their personal and
    professional growth building up a strong network
    of friends and work contacts.
  • contemporary families are fragile, as are most
    jobs, and in the end each of us must be able to
    depend on ourselves
  • as divorced or separated people often say,
    theres nothing lonelier than living with the
    wrong person- theres a difference between being
    lonely and alone

25
Singlehood
  • The rise in singlehood means
  • number of people living alone has pushed up
    demand for  housing
  • is very expensive in terms of state benefits and 
    health and social services care
  • people who live alone are more likely to need the
    NHS or social services
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