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The Family

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Approximately 1 million unmarried, teenage women get pregnant each year. ... Nevertheless, pregnant teenagers get married or settle down with a partner. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Family


1
  • The Family
  • Teenage Pregnancy
  • Divorce
  • Child Care
  • Same-Sex Marriage

2
The Family Introduction
  • Sociological research and program development
    related to the family includes investigations
    into a very broad range of topics
  • Dating.
  • Marriage and remarriage.
  • Sexuality and sexual relationships.
  • Gender.
  • Labor force participation.
  • Household division of labor.
  • Spouse abuse.
  • Childbirth and childrearing.
  • Child abuse.
  • Life course.
  • Divorce.
  • See SOC 219 Sociology of Intimate Relationships.

3
The Family Introduction
  • SOC 235 Social Problems
  • In Sociology 235, we will cover the topics that
    give rise to social problems
  • Teenage pregnancy Chapter 33.
  • Divorce Chapter 34.
  • Child care Chapter 36.
  • Same-sex marriage Notes.

4
Teenage Pregnancy
  • Kristin Luker The Politics of Teenage Pregnancy.
  • Rearing a child for unmarried, teenage mothers
    creates many problems for the mother, child, and
    society.
  • Approximately 1 million unmarried, teenage women
    get pregnant each year.
  • About 1/2 choose to carry their babies to term.
  • About 2/3 will be unmarried when the child is
    born.
  • Most of the unmarried mothers receive some type
    of welfare assistance.
  • Why do so many young women get pregnant?
  • In what ways is this phenomenon sociological?

5
Teenage Pregnancy
  • Expectations
  • A young woman can no longer expect that she will
    have a husband on whom she can be totally
    dependent, both economically and emotionally.
  • Women cannot expect a husband to share the
    burdens of childrearing and homemaking equally.
  • Young women today want a career and a family.
  • No teenager hopes to end up as an unmarried
    mother on welfare.

6
Teenage Pregnancy
  • The Path to Pregnancy
  • Many persons, both liberal and conservative
    (although for different reasons) believe that
    teenagers simply should stop having sex.
  • In general, cultural trends condone premarital
    sex. Recent trends advocate abstinence.
  • Teenagers today are using more contraception and
    using it more effectively than ever before.
  • About 80 of sexually active teenage women are
    using some method of contraception.
  • Among poor teens, this rate is slightly lower
    (72), but still substantial given the tendency
    for risk taking behavior among teenagers.

7
Teenage Pregnancy
  • The Path to Pregnancy
  • So, why do teenagers get pregnant?
  • Some get pregnant the first time they have sex
    because they are unknowledgeable about
    contraception or inexperienced in negotiating the
    situation.
  • Others get pregnant during transitions from one
    method of contraception to another.
  • For many young women, the sexual relationship is
    not entirely consensual. Young women feel
    coerced by peer pressure from males and females.
  • The skills needed to prevent pregnancy often are
    not taught to young men and women.
  • Some want a baby!

8
Teenage Pregnancy
  • Abortion
  • The decision to terminate pregnancy is powerfully
    affected by class, race, and socioeconomic
    status.
  • Women who are successful, or who expect to be
    successful, are more likely to terminate.
  • Affluent women are more likely to terminate.
  • White women are more likely to terminate.
  • Women with partners are more likely to terminate.
  • The decision to terminate is affected strongly by
    the opinions of family and friends.

9
Teenage Pregnancy
  • Marriage
  • Overall, Americans are less likely to get
    married, more likely to live together without
    being married, and more likely to be divorced.
  • Nevertheless, pregnant teenagers get married or
    settle down with a partner.
  • Many get married when they learn they have become
    pregnant.
  • Marriage during pregnancy varies widely by race
  • White teens who bring the baby to term are more
    likely to marry.
  • About 69 of African-American children are born
    to single mothers.

10
Teenage Pregnancy
  • Adoption
  • It is less common today compared with 50 years
    ago to give up a baby for adoption.
  • It has become more culturally acceptable to raise
    a child as a single parent.
  • Only about 3 percent of babies born to a white
    mother and 1 percent of babies born to a black
    mother are given up for adoption.
  • In the past, giving up the baby for adoption was
    considered to be more ethical than it is today.
  • Poor, African-American mothers are the least
    likely to give up their babies for adoption.

11
Teenage Pregnancy
  • Social Context
  • In the U.S., women over 20 account for most
    abortions, 70 percent of unmarried women are not
    teenagers, and teens make up a declining
    proportion of all unwed mothers.
  • Still, teens in the U.S. have higher rates of
    childbearing than teens in other industrialized
    country.
  • At the same time, abortion rates are much higher
    in the U.S. than in other nations.

12
Teenage Pregnancy
  • Social Context
  • In the U.S., childbearing and childrearing have
    become increasingly disconnected from marriage.
  • Americans have come to think of childbearing as a
    private enterprise, one that will receive little
    support from the larger society.
  • The birth patterns of poor and affluent women in
    the U.S. have begun to bifurcate, as each group
    copes with the difficulties of having children in
    a country that provides so little support.
  • Poor women follow the traditional pattern of
    childbirth and childrearing.
  • Affluent women are more likely to either
    terminate or give up the child for abortion.

13
Divorce in Perspective
  • Stephanie Coontz Divorce in Perspective
  • Although no one who marries expects or wants to
    divorce, about half of marriages in America end
    that way.
  • For most persons, divorce is a emotionally
    painful, embarrassing, and sometimes expensive
    ordeal.
  • Research does not support the claim that the
    current culture supports parents obtaining a
    divorce so they can pursue their selfish desires
    at the expense of the family.
  • Divorce is not necessarily a growth experience.

14
Divorce in Perspective
  • What Effects Does Divorce Have on the Children?
  • When couples have children, then divorce becomes
    a societal issue rather than a personal one.
  • More children of divorced parents drop out of
    school, exhibit emotional distress, get into
    trouble with the law, abuse drugs, etc.
  • But children of divorced parents do not have more
    problems than children from intact families.
  • The distinction is that children of divorced
    parents do not necessarily have more problems.
  • In fact, a large percentage of children from
    divorced parents score higher on achievement and
    adjustment tests than children from intact
    families.

15
Divorce in Perspective
Consider these diagrams of intact and divorced
families. Children with few problems
Children with noticeable problems Children with
higher than average achievement
Intact Families
Divorced Families
16
Divorce in Perspective
  • What Effects Does Divorce Have on the Children?
  • Many of the problems seen in children of divorced
    parents are caused not by the divorce alone but
    by other frequently coexisting yet analytically
    separate factors, such as poverty, financial
    loss, school relocation, or a prior history of
    severe marital conflict.
  • Income differences account for almost 50 percent
    of the disadvantage faced by children of
    single-parent households.
  • The tendency for less-educated parents to have
    higher divorce rates and unwed motherhood further
    distorts the statistics on the effects of divorce
    on the well-being of children.
  • The problems of children of divorced parents
    often were there for years prior to the divorce.

17
Divorce in Perspective
  • How to Minimize the Long-Term Effects of Divorce
  • Divorce is stressful for children.
  • Its consequences should not be trivialized as a
    growth experience.
  • But divorce does not doom the child to problems.
  • Some characteristics of parents that mediate the
    effects of divorce on child adjustment.
  • Personal adjustment.
  • Lack of conflict with former spouse.
  • Income.
  • Education.
  • Interpersonal communication skills.
  • Felt obligations to the former spouse and
    children.

18
Divorce in Perspective
  • How to Minimize the Long-Term Effects of Divorce
  • Some researchers suggest that we
    institutionalize divorce.
  • Clear obligations and rights should be attached
    to divorce as well as to child custody.
  • Establishing clear expectations of civilized
    behavior towards the former spouse and children.
  • Recognize the importance and value of remarriage
    and stepfamilies.
  • Institutionalizing divorce does not mean
    advocating for it.
  • It does mean accepting it and directly addressing
    its consequences for the adults and children
    involved.

19
Child Care in America
Barbara Bergmann and Suzanne Helburn Whats
Wrong with Child Care in America? Looking back
over the twentieth century, historians may well
decide that the most important transformation it
brought to America was the change in the role of
women and the resulting change in the way our
society finances and arranges for the care and
rearing of young children. The American child
care system, in which parents, largely
unassisted, must buy the care they need in the
marketplace, has not worked well.
20
Child Care in America
  • Increasing Need for Child Care.
  • Americans demand for child care has increased
    over the past few decades.
  • More women are working outside the home.
  • Men continue to work outside the home.
  • Divorce rates continue to be at about 50.
  • Out-of-wedlock births are increasing.
  • The high cost and low quality of child care,
    therefore, has given rise to a social problem
    childhood care and socialization outside the home.

21
Child Care in America
  • Problems of Obtaining Good Quality Child Care.
  • Child care can be expensive.
  • Care in a center for one preschool child for a
    normal work week begins at about 650 per month
    in Ames, Iowa.
  • Child care is expensive because it is labor
    intensive.
  • Quality child care is difficult to obtain.
  • Caring for children is difficult work, the most
    difficult job one will ever have.
  • High quality care costs more.
  • Poor-to-mediocre child care facilities flourish
    in America.

22
Child Care in America
  • How Do We Improve Child Care?
  • Suggestions for change reflect different opinions
    about family and childrearing.
  • Some say women should return to the home.
  • Some say withdraw government subsidies and let
    the free market determine who works and what type
    of care children will receive for those who
    choose to work.
  • Some argue that government assistance to families
    with children (rich and poor) is a form of
    discrimination.
  • Some argue for more government assistance.
  • Some argue for increased community action.

23
Child Care in America
  • How Do We Improve Child Care?
  • Bergmann and Helburn suggest an aggressive
    approach to providing good quality child care.
  • Children of families with incomes at or below the
    poverty line should be completely subsidized out
    of public funds (i.e., some federal, the
    remaining state and local).
  • Children of low-income families (i.e., 130 of
    the poverty line) should receive government
    supported vouchers.
  • Policies should be developed to improve the
    quality of child care, such as accreditation
    programs.
  • Providers should be reimbursed for receiving
    training leading to accreditation.

24
Child Care in America
  • How Do We Improve Child Care?
  • Initially, it might seem like these suggestions
    will be too expensive. And, likely they will be
    opposed by persons who think that women should
    return home.
  • But consider the positive outcomes of such an
    approach
  • Improved care for children.
  • Lowered rates of child abuse.
  • Lowered juvenile delinquency.
  • Improved academic performance of young children.
  • Recruitment of low-income labor in areas where it
    is needed.

25
Same-Sex Marriage
  • Same-sex marriage is considered as a social
    problem in America because it many people believe
    it is an important issue for defining the moral
    foundations of our society.
  • Is the institution of marriage reserved for one
    man and one woman?
  • Or is society best served by allowing marriage
    for all loving and committed couples?
  • The issue has mobilized the political left and
    right in a struggle to define what is moral and
    how morality will influence the laws of society.
  • Learning about this issue will help us understand
    how latency affects society.
  • It will also help us understand political
    discourse.

26
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Opponents
  • Marriage is an institution between one man and
    one woman.
  • The key point here is that most religious belief
    systems consider homosexuality to be a sin.
  • Same-sex marriage would destroy the sanctity of
    marriage as it is defined by a higher being.
  • Marriage is a common good, not a special interest
    (for the sinners).
  • Science cannot address this issue. Science
    cannot define what is moral. Yet definitions of
    morality are crucial to promoting social cohesion
    and therefore social order.

27
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Opponents
  • Same-sex marriages are not the optimum
    environment in which to raise children.
  • Children should not be denied their right to a
    mother and father.
  • Children need male and female role models in the
    household.
  • Gay/lesbian parents will raise gay/lesbian
    children.
  • Same-sex couples who raise children are pursuing
    their own selfish interests rather than meeting
    the needs of children.

28
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Opponents
  • Where does it stop?
  • How do we say no to a woman who wants to become
    the third wife of a polygamist?
  • Does same-sex marriage promote open marriage?
    Note The book, Open Marriage is about
    communication, not sex.
  • Is banning same-sex marriage like banning
    interracial marriage?
  • No, marriage is a union of one man and one woman,
    regardless of race.
  • There are no negative child-development outcomes
    created by interracial marriages.

29
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Opponents
  • Why would you write radical family redefinition
    into the Constitution?
  • Supporters of the Federal Marriage Amendment want
    a small few to constitutionally redefine marriage
    for all of us.
  • Either a small handful of unaccountable, activist
    judges are going to write a radical new
    definition of marriage into the Constitution, or
    the American people can protect marriage
    constitutionally through the option the founding
    fathers provided us via the amendment process.

30
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Opponents
  • Same-sex marriages will negatively affect the
    quality of opposite sex marriages.
  • Children in heterosexual marriages will learn
    that such marriages are optional for the family
    and therefore, meaningless.
  • Masculinity and femininity matter far too much to
    let them be negatively affected by allowing
    same-sex marriage.
  • Marriage is for procreation.
  • Same-sex marriages cannot produce children.
  • Children are needed for the survival of the
    species.

31
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Proponents
  • Same-sex marriages are not immoral.
  • Freedom of religion also means freedom from
    religion.
  • The Bible has no standing in American law.
  • The Bible states proscriptions against many types
    of behavior that Christians engage in everyday.
  • A society that clings too closely to
    fundamentalist beliefs will fail to adapt to
    changing world conditions.

32
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Proponents
  • Many heterosexual marriages cannot or do not
    produce children.
  • Since when is childbearing a litmus test for
    marriage?
  • Should heterosexual couples who do not choose to
    or cannot have children be forced to divorce?
  • The world population is hardly at risk from the
    lack of procreation among a small minority of the
    population.
  • Same-sex couples can adopt the many children in
    need of adoption.

33
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Proponents
  • Same-sex marriages do not harm children.
  • Research shows that children raised by same-sex
    couples score no differently on tests of academic
    achievement or social adjustment than do children
    from heterosexual couples.
  • Heterosexual perpetrators who abuse children are
    allowed to marry and stay married.

34
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Proponents
  • Same-sex marriages would not threaten the
    institution of marriage.
  • How can being married threaten the institution of
    marriage?
  • Allowing gay/lesbians to marry would reinforce
    rather than threaten the importance of marriage.
  • Same-sex unions have been shown to be more stable
    than heterosexual unions.
  • Marriage is traditionally a heterosexual
    institution.
  • So was slavery for many years.

35
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Proponents
  • Same-sex marriages would not lead us down a
    slippery slope towards legalized incest, bestial
    marriage, polygamy, or other unions.
  • Such forms have not been advocated in countries
    that do allow same-sex marriage.
  • Convicted child molesters, known pedophiles, drug
    pushers, pimps, arms dealers, and others are
    allowed to marry without leading us down a
    slippery slope toward the types of unions
    mentioned above.
  • Society can allow or disallow any kind of
    marriage it wants. Allowing same-sex marriage is
    not a slippery slope.

36
Same-Sex Marriage
  • The Perspective of Proponents
  • Legalizing same-sex marriages would force
    churches to marry gay/lesbian couples when they
    have a moral objection to doing so.
  • Churches can refuse to marry anyone, now.
  • Straight marriages would be less meaningful.
  • Britney Spears 55-hour just-for-fun marriage,
    for example, was highly meaningful!
  • Civil unions, providing most of the same
    benefits of marriage, are sufficient.
  • Separate but equal has never worked well in
    America.

37
Same-Sex Marriage
  • Why Is Same-Sex Marriage a Social Problem?
  • Same-sex marriage is a social problem because it
    affects the latency of the social system.
  • Social cohesion (sense of we-ness) and social
    solidarity (willingness to work together) are
    crucial elements of the effective functioning of
    society.
  • Defining morality and its limits is a critical
    element affecting social cohesion and social
    solidarity.
  • Public discourse about same-sex marriage is
    important because it helps Americans explore the
    boundaries of what they consider to be moral and
    immoral.
  • What is best for the benefit of the whole?
  • Whose definitions of morality will prevail?

38
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