Nov 12 - Expanding Families Flashcards

1
Q

myth of motherhood

A

the idealization of motherhood as natural instinct that fulfills a woman, the ideal is having a child of each sex, women as deficient if they don`t have kids, women in their 30s and 40s hear their “biological clock” ticking

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2
Q

What are some of the medical reasons that Canadian families are shrinking?

A
  • infant mortality has declined since 1960s, it is no longer necessary to have large number of children to ensure the survival of two or three
  • contraception has become more convenient and effective, birth control pill first became available in 1961
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3
Q

What are some of the legal reasons that Canadian families are shrinking?

A
  • until 1969, contraception and abortion were illegal, birth rate dropped sharply with legalization of birth control
  • 1988: Supreme Court of Canada decriminalized abortion, makes it possible to avoid having children after birth control fails
  • sterilization, among married couples where wife is over 35, nearly two-thirds are protected by sterilization
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4
Q

What are some of the economic reasons that Canadian families are shrinking?

A
  • shift from resource-based to a manufacturing-based economy, need less children to work the family business or farm
  • birth rate is connected to national and global economics, ex. evidence that abortions and sterilizations increase during hard times
  • womens’ participation in the workforce, in late 20th century the birth rate has dropped in industrialized countries
  • raising children is very expensive, ex. lost career opportunities, standards as to ‘providing for them well’ have changed
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5
Q

role incompatibility hypothesis

A

an inverse relationship occurs between women’s work and fertility when the roles of worker and mother conflict,a negative relationship between female employment and fertility exists to the extent that they are competing uses of time, this is because of the strain of performing the roles of both employee and mother

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6
Q

How has women’s participation in the workforce lead to a lower birth rate?

A
  • role incompatibility hypothesis
  • education is more important for employment than in past so many women postpone child-bearing until out of school and financially stable
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7
Q

How much did it cost to raise a child to age 18 in 2004? What percent of their incomes do families in Quebec and Ontario spend on their first children?

A
  • raising a child to age 18 cost nearly $167 000 in 2004

- including housing and daycare, families spend from 10% (Quebec) to 15% (Ontario) of their income on the first child

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8
Q

-value of children (VOC) framework;

A

a classification scheme that includes three satisfactions (or values) of children:

1. instrumental assistance (help in old age)
2. rewarding interactions (companionship, love)
3. psychological appreciation (living through children) - also includes costs:
- financial costs (the cost of education)
- child-rearing demands (emotional strain and pregnancy)
- restrictions on parents (being tied down)
- costs to social relationships (marital strain)
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9
Q

What are some of the psychosocial reasons that Canadian families are shrinking?

A
  • some women don’t want to sacrifice career to which they are dedicated
  • some people don’t have a partner with whom they want to have children
  • people have changing perspectives on the value to children
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10
Q

What are some different approaches to increasing the birth rate?

A
  • family allowance program
  • theorists suggest that increases in fertility depend on providing conditions to increase young people’s confidence in their future
  • encouraging immigration of young people who are of childbearing age will stimulate a sagging birth rate
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11
Q

family allowance program

A

in Canada began in 1945, gave benefits for children under 16, ex. baby bonus

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12
Q

What are the 4 options for unwanted pregnancies?

A
  1. abortion; medical termination of a pregnancy, aka feticide
  2. adoption; the legal transfer of parental rights, obligations to adoptive parents
  3. fostering; the provision of care by a family, other than a parent or guardian of a child, approved and arranged by a child welfare authority
  4. keep child
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13
Q

Has the rate of abortions gone up or down in recent years?

A

number of abortions has decreased in recent years, down by 35% from 1997-2010

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14
Q

open adoption

A

biological & adoptive parents know each other and exchange information

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15
Q

aboriginal custom adoption

A

privately arranged adoption between two families within the Aboriginal community, to try to preserve cultural heritage

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16
Q

inter-country adoption

A

recognizes an individual or couple as the legal and permanent parents of a child from another country

17
Q

closed adoption

A

biological & adoptive parents know little of each other, records are often sealed permanently

18
Q

Which 3 countries are have the largest numbers of children coming into Canada through inter-country adoption? what gender is most common?

A

the largest numbers of incoming adoptions are from China, South Korea, and Haiti, 2/3 are girls

19
Q

Trends in Canadian foster care.

A
  • trend is towards kinship care, keep it within the family, ex. grandparents, aunts, can be forced upon the parents, keeping families together, reuniting child with biological parent
  • with improvements in benefits for single parents, children less likely to enter care because of extreme poverty
  • more likely to be in care because of behavioural problems, neglect or abuse
  • children tend to be older than before and more have emotional and physical problems
  • aboriginal children and children with special needs are overrepresented
  • foster families are in short supply
20
Q

How many foster children are there in Canada?

A

76 000 to 85 000

21
Q

Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART’s)

A
  1. Artificial insemination (AI)
  2. Surrogacy
  3. In vitro fertilization (IVF)
22
Q

artificial insemination (AI)

A

using sperm from a donor to fertilize an egg – couples and single women, donor sperm is used if husband is infertile or caries a genetic disorder

23
Q

surrogacy

A

a woman agrees to AI for a fee; child biological father and his wife, as of 2004 is regulated by the Assisted Human Reproduction Act

24
Q

In vitro fertilization (IVF)

A

fertilizing a woman’s eggs with her partner’s sperm in a lab dish and placing the embyo(s) in her uterus, used when Fallopian tubes are blocked, first test tube baby was in 1978
-can use DNA testing to find sex, inherited diseases, health