Marriage, Families, and Relationships: Chapter 7
What are the 5 major social institutions?
Family, education, government, religion, and economy
social institution
a fundamental part of society where individuals in a defined status (ex: married) are regulated by social norms, public opinion, the law, and religion
family of procreation
family formed by marrying and having kids, most meaningful inner circle for many Americans
family of orientation
family you grew up in
individualism
how you think about yourself, "selfish"
family decline perspective
conservative claim/view that individualized marriage has led to weakened morals, less focus on family, and is worse than companionate marriage
companionate marriage
couples bound by being companions, with a single breadwinner and division of labor, hopes for an "American dream" life, emotional satisfaction important for success
expectations of permanence
expectation that marriage is a lifelong commitment, based on history of economic agreements between the couple's family and social expectation of a family
kin
extended family, still very important to recent immigrants and lower socioeconomic classes
marriage gap
fewer poor people are married than those who think they can afford it/have a higher income
individualized marriage
four key parts: it's optional, roles are flexible and changing, built on love/communication/emotional intimacy, and exists with many family forms
polygamy
having more than one spouse, uncommon, more men with multiple wives than vice versa, illegal since 1875 in US
deinstitutionalization of marriage
historic family definitions and social norms are less important than in the past (ex: kids outside of marriage is less stigmatized now than before)
individualistic society
individual's interests and concerns are more important than others' expectations
institutionalized marriage
marriage as a social institution, based on historic traditions as the norm of permanence, kin have control
marriage premise
marriages are based on permanence and social expectations of monogamous sexual exclusivity
polyamory
marriages where one or both spouses can sexually love others, can be emotional and sexual
role-making
personalizing a role by adjusting its traditional expectations (intimacy, communication, job and school responsibilities, budgeting, parenting, etc)
marital sanctification
seeing your marriage as "divine" because it was ordained by God (married under your church too, brings God into it and makes it more special)
economy of scale
some expenses are less when there's two people instead of one (think split rent, a second income in case of emergencies, etc.)
expectations of sexual exclusivity
spouses promise to only have sex with each other, broadened from only sex to emotions too
War on Poverty
started by Pres. Johnson in the 1960s; structural strategies to decrease child poverty levels, led to record lows, included Job Corps and adult education. Ended after national views changed to individual responsibility, child poverty increased again after ending
selection hypothesis
the benefits found in marriage (higher income/wealth, better health) are actually from the personal traits of those who marry [socioeconomic status->marriage or not]
experience hypothesis
the experience of being married causes the benefits of being married [marriage->middle-class status]
heteronormativity
the idea that heterosexuality is the only normal, acceptable, or "real" option, challenged by same-sex couples
collectivist/communal society
values focus on society as a whole group, not the individual
family change perspective
view that deinstitutionalization of marriage was inevitable, focus on helping the families (single parent and other) living in poverty and social issues that lead to this (low wages, incarceration, expensive day care, etc)