Nuclear Family And Extended Family

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    Sociology

    WORKBOOK ANSWERS AQA AS Sociology Unit 1 Families and Households This Answers book provides some possible answers that might be given for the questions asked in the workbook. They are not exhaustive and other answers may well be acceptable, but they are intended as a guide to give teachers and students feedback. The responses for the longer essay-style questions are intended to give some idea about how the exam questions might be answered. Again, these are not the only ways to answer

    Words: 7450 - Pages: 30

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    Untraditional Families

    Untraditional Families Naomi Gerstel and Natalia Sarksian have shed new light on the subject of minority families and their differences to the traditional nuclear families in their essay, “The Color of Family Ties.” According to their work, those of White descent make up most of all nuclear families which can be described as a father, mother and children all living in one household. Gerstel and Sarkasian point out that it is not always the case that, “Black and Latino/a, especially Puerto Rican

    Words: 1546 - Pages: 7

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    Unknown

    The institution of family is a natural social system with unique properties of its own including roles, rules, a power structure, forms of communication, ways of negotiation and problem solving that allows varioous tasks to be performed effectively. Society has changed greatly from the 1950's to present time. This paper will explore the dramatic changes between then and now. The definition itself hasn't changed, but the effectiveness of the roles and rules has. There are different sturctural examples

    Words: 312 - Pages: 2

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    Explain How Do Anthropologists Define Marriage

    parties. A family is comprised of children or adopts offspring by establishing guidelines and rules to reduce violence and increase productivity and to initiate strong connections between the kin of both spouses. The family played an important role in socio-economic cooperation where the spouses are responsible to maintain capital to provide resources to the children and the ability to own a property. However, they are many exceptions that commonly exist within cross-cultural people where families are prohibited

    Words: 450 - Pages: 2

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    Assess Sociological Explanations of the Nature and Extent of Family Diversity Today. (24 Marks)

    explanations of the nature and extent of family diversity today. (24 marks) In today's society, there are various alternatives from the typical family type. The top examples of these are lone-parent, cohabitation and reconstituted. But there are also some others such as same sex couples, single parent and multi-cultural families. There has been a decrease in the number of nuclear families in the UK and an increase in various other families such as single parent families. But the raise in single parent

    Words: 861 - Pages: 4

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    Using Material from Item a and Elsewhere Assess the Sociological Explanations of the Nature and Extent of Family Diversity Today

    Nature and Extent of Family Diversity Today In our modern society, there are different types of families including, but not limited to, the nuclear family, single parent family and divorce-extended family. This has caused sociologists to argue about whether this is a bad thing for society. Functionalists and the New Right argue that without pre-set roles in families, for example the male breadwinner and female homemaker, society would fall apart. These groups argue that the family that best serves

    Words: 540 - Pages: 3

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    The Sociological View on Femist

    Name: SCLY 1: Families and Households Revision Notes 2011-12 By the end of this unit you should be able to * answer any question on families and households ! Key definitions: A family is usually a group of people related by marriage or blood. A household is a person living alone or a group of people living together who may or may not be related. Theories of the family From the specification: The relationship of the family to the social structure and social change * Functionalist

    Words: 16472 - Pages: 66

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    Love

    then are extended towards our outer family, friends, neighbors, colleagues and then strangers. But what makes these relationships strong and help in giving emotional succor depends entirely on our input and priorities.   At one time, joint families were the norm of the society and one found 3 generations living together and enjoying warmth, caring and shared responsibilities. This also helped in developing adaptability and adjustability. But with changing demands of the world, joint families gave way

    Words: 447 - Pages: 2

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    Definition of the Family

    Masters 110 8-14-2013 DEFINITIONS OF FAMILY The definition of family has become a topic of heated controversy over the last few decades, and almost everybody has a different opinion about a family. According to a Life (1992, June 1) magazine article, 74 percent of Americans felt that a family is a group of people who love and care for one another. Only 22 percent of Americans thought that a family is a group of people related by blood, marriage, or adoption. This means that the majority

    Words: 885 - Pages: 4

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    Revision

    | What is a Reconstituted Family? | A reconstituted family is a family that consists of a mother and her children from one family and a father and his children from another family joining together through marriage. | | What is meant by the term 'industrialisation'? | When the industry changed from being one of agriculture to one where factories, shops, markets and healthcare was provided. This is the process of Structural Differentiation. | | What does cohabitation mean? | Cohabitation is where

    Words: 2505 - Pages: 11

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