Title: Traditional Views on the Function of the Family
1Traditional Views on the Function of the Family
- The perfect Kelloggs family and the disastrous
Simpsons have one thing in common they
represent the only functional solution to
child-rearing.
2Social Trends Marriage Divorce after the 1969
Act
- Divorce rate p/1000 1961-2, 1971-6, 1990-13
- Divorces per year have doubled
- 40 of marriages fail, 75 involving kids
- Marriage rate p/1000 has halved
- Re-Marriage rate p/1000 has fallen
- Cohabitation has doubled (30 of 20-somethings)
- Births to unmarried mums up from 8 gt 30
- 1998 44,000 pregnancies 16-18, 8000 under 16 (3
of all unmarried mums are teenagers)
3Social Trends Marriage, Divorce Remarriage
4(No Transcript)
5General Household Survey 1 Single Parenthood
2002/3
- 1961 2 of households SP gt 2002 8 SP
- 1972 7 of children had SP gt 2002 21 SP
- 2003 25 of households dependent kids SP
- 88 of kids with a SP live with their mum.
- Single Parent Mothers in 2003
45 unmarried mum a big increase
since 1972 - 32 divorced mum
- 18 separated lone mum
- 5 widowed lone mother
6General Household Survey 2 Single Parenthood
2002/3
- 15 of SPs stop being lone parents each year and
set up home with a new partner. - 55 of SP are on Income Support, compared to 4
of couples with dependent children. - 61 of lone-parent families are said to be below
the poverty line. - Despite the CSA, 70 of non-resident parents
linked to a SP, made no contribution towards the
cost of raising their children either because
they had deserted the family or because they were
themselves unemployed or on low incomes.
7British Social Attitudes SurveySingle
Parenthood 2000
- Of 75-85 yr olds, 90 thought people who wanted
children should get married, but only 30 of
those under 25 agreed with this. - 82 of people disapproved of teen pregnancies.
- 83 thought bringing up a child on her own was
too hard for a single teenager. - 42 thought bringing up a child on her own was
too hard for a single woman. - Very few illegitimate births are planned gt single
parenthood is not seen as desirable, by many. - Most single parents had hoped for a partner.
-
8Traditional views on the function of the Family
- The Kelloggs or Simpsons Family is seen by
Functionalists as a Universal Solution to the
problem of raising and socialising Human children - Nuclear Families have adapted to meet the needs
of post-Industrial Societies - The New Right considers the diversity of modern
families a threat to our way of life.
9Murdock Social Structure 1949
- Family is a Universal Solution to the need to
protect and socialise children - The Family is a basic economic unit
- The Nuclear Family is the product of
industrialisation, because societies need a
mobile labour force - This is a Functionalist Structuralist view that
assumes people are shaped by Society
10Talcott Parsons The Social System 1951
- The Family socialises children and stabilises
(supports) the personalities of the adults,
giving order and meaning to their lives the
warm bath. - As societies become more complex, so members
specialise in different roles. - Gender roles are specialised women nurture the
children (Expressive), men provide (Instrumental) - This is Functionalist, but also uses the
Sociobiological argument that the Nuclear Family
(Patriarchal in form) is somehow natural
11Talcott Parsons Socialisation Interaction 1955
- Industrialisation and urbanisation caused a
change from Nuclear to Extended families - A mobile labour force was needed
- Family no longer defined status/class people
could improve themselves social mobility - Kinship declined in importance also because
professionals replaced kin, in providing
assistance in sickness, unemployment, for
childcare or for education.
12Berger Marriage social construction of reality
1964
- The meaning of Family is constructed from the
meanings that social actors give to their
interactions with other social members - Actors use the Family to make sense of their
world this is essential for avoiding anomie
(feeling of not belonging) or alienation (feeling
of not having a stake in Society) - Families provide a sense of having
responsibilities and guidelines (norms) for
behaviour
13Berger War over the Family 1983
- Supported the New Right move to defend Family
Values and traditional morality - Attacked socialist, collective, approaches to
child-rearing as a failure (Soviet) or as
exaggerated (Kibbutz) - Childrens homes were the worst way to bring up
children abuse,crime,drugs etc. - Family is best, dont knock it
14Mount The Subversive Family 1982
- New Right / Functionalist view that the Family is
a social institution that works, because it
conforms to human nature. This is the Familial
ideology. - Caring for children is the duty and destiny of
women women shouldnt be made to feel inferior
because they choose to be stay-at-home mothers - Diversity, divorce and womens liberation are
covers for a new selfishness immorality - Dysfunctional families weaken Society
15Abbot Wallace 1992The New Right the Family
- 1980s reaction against diversity, high taxation
and youth crime Pro-Family, Pro-Life, Catholic,
Conventional,C.of E,, Evangelical, Conservative,
Muslim, Fundamentalist, UK Mrs Thatcher 1979-90
USA President Reagan 1981-1989. - Labours socialist policies were deliberately
undermining the family high taxes forced more
mothers to work, social security payments to
single mothers encouraged dysfunctional families
to raise dysfunctional children, homosexuality
had been encouraged legalised, personal
responsibility for caring for ones children had
been replaced by a leave it to the State
attitude.
16Lister 1996 Back to the Family
- John Major 1990-1997 carried on the Thatcher
approach to the Family, until wrecked by scandal. - A Family minister, raised Child benefit, Child
Support Agency, Adoption privileged married
couples over partners or gays, Back to Basics
campaign to restore family values, criticism of
lone-mothers as irresponsible scroungers, - The Childrens Act 1989 the Family Law Act 1996
rejected the clean break ideal for divorces.
Instead it was presumed that divorce was a
problem for children that both parents should
still share all of the responsibility for raising
them.
17Silva Smart 1999 The New Practices Policies
of Family Life 1
- Silva Smart argue that Blairs New Labour
1997gt have continued the emphasis on family
values encouraging conventional family life. - Blair argues that family life is the foundation
of society. The government is not preaching about
individual morality, but simply addressing a
major cause of social problems - IE the effect of divorce on children, teenage
pregnancies, lack of care for the elderly, poor
parental role models, truancy, underachievement
in school and a generalised unhappiness in
Society.
18Silva Smart 1999 The New Practices Policies
of Family Life 2
- 1998 the Supporting Families Green Paper and The
National Family Parenting Institute were aimed
to provide better information services for
families. Critics point out that Blair means an
idealised conventional family, like the perfect
1st family of Tony and Cherie. - It has suggested that health visitors should be
more involved registrars should give counselling
before marriage more counselling before divorce
longer paid maternity leave help with childcare
costs for lone mums The New Deal low-income
families Working Families Tax Credits
pre-nuptial agreements binding. -
19John Redwood Conservative Minister under
Thatcher 1
- Too many dysfunctional families of 1m single
parent families 55 were on benefits. - 70 of lone parents received no support from the
father, who left things to the State gt Child
Support Agency created to find fathers. - Young girls got pregnant to jump the housing
queues and avoid work - People gave excuses for their bad behaviour, but
the poor were often depraved, not deprived - Single parents were unnatural and damaged their
children gt crime failure at school.
20John Redwood Conservative Minister under
Thatcher 2
- The New Right urged the common sense view that
single Parents could not give their children
enough time and that the children must suffer as
a result. - Mary McIntosh, in Social Anxieties about Lone
Motherhood 1996, criticised Redwood for yielding
to moral panics in the media. She denied that
single parents were second rate parents or that
the rise in SP families could be linked to higher
truancy levels, youth crime, underachievement or
teenage pregnancies. Evidence for girls
deliberately getting pregnant in order to avoid
work jump the housing queues was very rare.
21New Labour The Welfare Dependency of Single
Parents 1
- Lone parents, without substantial assistance from
an ex-partner, are caught in a poverty trap
childcare almost equals their wage and so they
cannot work. - Labour do not officially accept Murrays thesis
that welfare payments are creating an underclass
of dependent, unemployed, social-security
scrounger. - BUT Most single parents are on benefits, even
when in work. - Only 44 of single parent mothers are in paid
employment and many of those are part time.
22New Labour The Welfare Dependency of
Single Parents 2
- Blair was influenced by President Clinton the
Democratic Party in the USA, who aimed to replace
welfare with workfare. - It is alleged, in Labours Supporting Families
Green Paper 1998, that 85 of SP mothers would
like to get into full-time employment. - Labours New Deal for Lone Parents does aim to
use help with childcare to get single parent
mothers back into the world of work. - The key step here was to offer incentives for
younger SP mothers to complete their education,
so that they could become employable.
23New Labour The Welfare Dependency of Single
Parents 3 A Critique
- Allan Crow, in Families, Households and Society
2001 argued that there was no evidence that
SP had developed sub-cultural values, in the way
that Murrays Underclass Thesis suggested. - Allan Crow pointed out that most SP aspire to
find a life partner, to share their experience of
parenting. They estimate how? that the average
experience of being a SP only lasts 5 years. - The CSA was counter productive, because mothers
lost Income Support, if they received maintenance
- so there was no incentive for Fathers to
contribute. 61 of SP were in poverty.
24New Labour The Welfare Dependency of Single
Parents 4 A Critique
- Perry Institute of Housing found no evidence
that single parents were being given priority
over homeless couples, for local authority
housing. - Cashmore, in Rewriting the Script 1985, found no
evidence that children suffered psychologically
from having only one parent. It was the quality
of the parenting that mattered. Lone parents
didnt need the missing partner so much as the
partners income. The critical variable was
poverty, not being a SP. BUT Morgan, in
Farewell to the Family 1995, cautioned that we do
not yet know enough about the effects on kids, of
being brought up by a lone parent.