Topic 1 (changing patterns of marriage, cohabitation, separation, divorce, childbearing and the sociology of personal life, the diversity of contemporary family and household structures) Flashcards
What is a household?
A person living alone or a group of people living together for examples sharing meals, bills, housework etc. This group may or may not be related to one another.
What are two contrasting definitions of the family?
1) It involves monogamous marriage between a man + a women, plus their child(ren), all sharing the same residence. The nuclear family is often held up as the ideal but this definition rules out groups that many would see as unmarried cohabiting couples.
2) A set of arrangements that those involved see as a family, is a family. Prevents others making judgements about people’s lifestyles: if you define your own personal set up as a family, sociologists have no right to disagree. However, some see this approach as too broad.
What are Rapoport and Rapoport’s five types of diversity?
Believe there are a range of different family types based on the fact we live in a pluralistic society (cultures + lifestyles are more diverse).This reflects greater freedom of choice. They see diversity as a positive response to peoples different wishes/needs.
identify 5 types of diversity:
cultural - caused by migration - ethnic groups have different family structures.
life-stage - through individuals life course they’re likely to experience a variety of family structures.
organisational - different ways of organising the household an the family roles.
generational - depending on the era an individual lived in they may have different views towards household structures.
social class - income of a family can influence its structure.
What do Eversley and Bonnerjea say about family structures?
Link family structures with geographical location and local influences.
(6 types):
Affluent south - mobile 2 parent nuclear Fam.
Geriatric wards - coastal areas which attract retired + elderly couples.
Recently declined area - young fam often move here and have little support from extended kin.
Rural areas - Fam who work in agriculture or related areas of economy - tend to be extended + traditional.
Inner cities - high level of social deprivation + large pop. many SPH + higher proportion of migrants. also many LPF - people more likely isolated from kin.
Older industrial areas - traditional fam structure + relationships + older population.
What are the 4 key trends in Marriage?
1) Fewer people are marrying
2) Civil ceremonies have increased
3) people are marrying later
4) remarriages are increasing
Whats a piece of evidence that supports the trend: fewer people are marrying?
marriage rates are at their lowest since the 1920s
Statistic to support idea that people are marrying later in life
In 2012 the average age for first time marriage had increased by 7 years since 1971 (32 for men and 30 for women)
Statistic to support fewer people marrying
The proportion of households that contained a married couple has fallen from 74% in 1961 to 42% in 2016
Statistic to support remarriages are increasing
Remarriages for both partners accounted for 15% of all marriages, the remaining 19% accounted for those where one partner had been married previously. This is leading to a pattern of serial monogamy, a trend of marriage-divorce-remarriage.
what are civil ceremonies? Evidence to support their increase?
a non-religious legal marriage ceremony performed by a government official.
Couples are less likely to marry in church today.
The proportion of civil ceremonies first exceeded the number of religious ceremonies in 1992.
what are the reasons for fewer people marrying?
changing attitudes to marriage: less pressure to marry and more freedom to choose the type of relationship you want. quality of couples relationship is more important than its status. the ‘norm’ that everyone must get married is greatly weakened.
secularisation - as the churches influence decreases, people feel freer to choose not to marry.
declining stigma attached to alternatives to marriage: cohabitation, remaining single, having children outside of marriage are now widely regarded as acceptable. pregnancy no longer leads to ‘shotgun wedding’.
changes in position of women: better educational + career prospects - women are now less economically dependant on men. this gives them greater freedom not to marry. feminist view - marriage is an oppressive patriarchal institution that may dissuade women from marrying.
fear of divorce: rising divorce rates > some may be put off marrying because they see the increased likelihood of marriage ending in divorce.
what is the reason for the rise in remarriages?
The number of divorces are increasing. the rising number of divorces provide supply of people who are now available to remarry.
what are the reasons for people marrying later?
younger people postpone marrying for a number of reasons: spend longer in full time education, establish themselves in their career, save money, cohabit before getting married.
why have civil ceremonies increased?
secularisation: fewer people see the relevance of religious ceremonies.
many churches refuse to marry divorcees - divorcees nowadays make up a growing proportion of those marrying.
what are the reasons for the trend of increasing cohabitation?
Changes in position of women
Secularisation: young people with no religion are more likely to cohabit than those with a religion.
Changing social attitudes and declining stigma: young people are more likely to cohabit than older people and therefore are more accepting.
Fear of divorce
How does Chandler (1993) and Chester (1985) differ in their ideas of cohabitation?
chandler suggests cohabitation ahs been increasingly accepted as permanent alternative to marriage and this is reflected in increasing no. of children born outside of marriage.
Chester argued that in most cases cohabitation is a transient, temporary phase before marriage - stepping stone to it.
What evidence did Coast (2006) find to support the idea of cohabitation as a prelude to marriage?
75% of cohabiting couples expect to marry each other if their cohabitation is successful.
What’s a Statistic that shows rate of divorce in UK?
Latest statistics found that 42% of marriages in England and wales end in divorce.
What factors influence the likelihood of divorce ?
cohabitation has increased in recent years. people often live together before getting married, + this may act to filter out weaker relationships from progressing to marriage.
the age at which people first marry has been increasing. population trends show that those marrying when they’re older have a lower risk of divorce.
whether they had married before.
What is the Divorce Reform Act 1969?
Made divorce easier
Divorce available after 2 yrs agreed separation/5yrs if only one spouse agreed to divorce.
What is the civil partnership act (2004)?
this allowed legal dissolution of civil partnership on the same grounds as for marriage - irretrievable breakdown.
What are the reasons for the increase in divorce?
changes in divorce legislation - made it easier + cheaper to end marriages: equalising grounds for divorce, widening grounds for divorce, providing legal aid. previously people remained in ‘empty shell marriages’ but now these solutions are less popular, because divorce is easier.
changing social attitudes: Mitchell and Goody- divorce is no longer associated with shame + stigma. long term shift away form monogamy to serial monogamy. Less pressure to stay in empty shell marriage.
secularisation: fewer people who believe that marriage has to be ‘till death do us part’.
rising expectations of marriage- more people demand higher standards from their partners . today, people are less likely to tolerate an unfulfilling relationship.
changing role of women: feminists note women’s expectations of marriage have radically changed, this reflects their improved status. they are more likely to be in paid work, pay gap has been narrowed, they have greater success in education. in the past women were trapped economically, however today they have greater financial independence + there is more state help for SPF.
What are the 4 key trends of childbearing?
women are having children later
more women are remaining childless
women are having fewer children
increase in number of children born outside of marriage
what evidence does Brown (1995) provide to support the trend of more children being born outside marriage?
This trend reflects a reduction in ‘shot gun weddings’ where couples marry to legitimise pregnancy.
Statistics to show more women are remaining childless
2013 - 1 in 5 women reaching the age of 45 were childless.
Evidence to support women are having fewer children:
average number of children per women fell from 2.95 in 1964 to a record low of 1.63 in 2001.
this increase was largely accounted by non- UK born women having greater number of children.