Family Diversity Flashcards
What do the New Right argue about family diversity?
- Any other type than the TNF is dysfunctional and abnormal.
- TNF is in decline and this should cause a moral panic.
- The welfare state gives incentives for the underclass not to work.
- Family diversity such as gay families, lone parent families and cohabiting families have an impact on the children negatively.
What are the post-modern perspectives of family diversity?
- The individuals control society and this leads to increasing family diversity due to choice.
What are possible criticisms of the individualisation thesis?
- Exaggerates how much choice people have about family type today.
- Budgeon (2011) notes that this reflects neoliberal ideology that individuals today have complete freedom of choice. In reality however traditional norms that limit peoples relationship choices are not weakened as much as the thesis claims.
- The thesis wrongly sees people as ‘free-floating’ individuals.
- It ignores the fact that our decisions and choices about personal relationships are made within social context.
- Ignores the importance of structural factors such as social class inequalities and patriarchal gender norms in limiting and shaping our relationship choices.
- Not everyone has the same ability as privileged groups to exercise choice about relationships.
What does the connectedness thesis do?
- Emphasise the role of class and gender structures.
Examples:
- After a divorce, gender norms generally dictate that women should have custody of the children which may limit their opportunity to form new relationships.
- Men are free to form new relationships and new families after divorce.
- Men are generally better paid than women and this gives them greater freedom and choice in relationships.
- The relative powerlessness of women and children compared with men means that many lack the freedom to choose and so remain trapped in abusive relationships.
Why is divorce a cause of family diversity?
- Because it creates an increase in reconstituted families or lone parent families.
What is the definition of divorce?
- The legal termination of a marriage
What is an empty shell marriage?
- Where the couple continue to cohabit but that their marriage only exists in name.
- For example the couple may only choose to stay together for sake of the children.
What are some statics/patterns and trends for divorce?
Give at least two examples
At least two examples from the following:
- Since the 1960s there has been a rapid increase in divorce.
- Between 1961 and 1968 divorce rates doubled and then doubled again in 1972.
- The upward trend peaked in 1993.
- 40% of relationships end in divorce.
- 7/10 petitions for divorce come from women.
Under what cucumstances are couples at a greater risk of divorce?
If they have:
- Married young
- Had children before getting married
- Been married before
What are the causes for an increase in divorce?
1) Changes in the law
2) Declining stigma and changing attitudes
3) Secularisation
4) Rising expectations of marriage
5) Stress caused by an isolated TNF
6) Changes in the position of women
What changes in the law have taken place to make divorce easier?
- Equalising the legal reasons for divorce between men and women.
- Widening grounds for divorce
- Making divorce cheaper
What other ways (other than divorce) can couples deal with an unhappy marriage?
- Desertation
- Legal separation
What is the definition for desertation?
- Where one person leaves the other but the couple remained married.
What is the definition for legal separation?
- Where the court separates the financial and legal affairs of a couple but they remain married and are not free to remarry.
What are some patterns and trends in laws surrounding divorce?
Give two examples
- The grounds for divorce have now widened and in 1996 there was no longer a need to show one partner was at fault. Instead the coupled with divorce on the grounds of ‘irretrievable breakdown’.
- In 2002 it became necessary for spouses to pay a fixed proportion of their income to childcare costs even if they didn’t have custody.
What are possible evaluation points for changes in the law?
- Changes in the law give people the freedom to divorce but that this does explain why people choose to divorce.
Previously, how was divorce stigmatised? (Example)
- Churches tended to disapprove of divorce and often refused to conduct marriages involving divorcees
How has the decline in the stigma of divorce helped couples to solve their marriage problems?
- Couples are now more willing to divorce.
Why is divorced now less stigmatised?
It has become normalised
How is divorce seen today?
More to be as a result of misfortune, than something to be ashamed of.
Do children with a divorced parents have a higher risk of getting divorced?
Yes
What does secularisation refer to?
- The influence of religion in society.
What does secularisation cause?
- Church attendance rates to decline.
- People to be less influenced by religious teachings when making decisions about personal matters such as whether to file for divorce.
What has secularisation caused churches to do?
- Soften their view on divorce and divorcees