Social Development and Family Changes

Front Cover
Cristina Gomes
Cambridge Scholars Press, 2006 - Family & Relationships - 424 pages
This book presents various studies that go beyond the mere opposition between macro and micro determinants of social and family changes. The cross-cultural, transdisciplinary and generational perspectives on selection of the partner, marriage, cohabitation, LAT relationships, divorces, ageing and interchanges, children, types of households, inheritance and construction of the domestic space contribute to deepen the analysis of diversity in families and their multiple interactions with cultural, demographic, economic, and social processes. The authors reveal the complex connections between the internal and external spheres of the family, the historical moments and contexts, the intergenerational experiences, the macro-structural processes and the individualsâ (TM) multiple possibilities of action, between the everyday decision-making and the changes in the familiesâ (TM) practices. Exceptional situations, such as catastrophes or economic crises, contribute to the diversification of the family and promote retrocession in gender equality. Crisis and war intensify female care and domestic work. Diversification implies that families are not adscripted to closed systems, determined automatically within also closed societies that portray family as a miniature reflection of social structures. Deconstructing this myth, most of the authors recognize family diversity and its variations in space and time.

The understanding of the economic, social, cultural and demographic family processes and practices permits to relate population and society. The duplication of the life expectancy and the reduction of births by almost one half in entire populations worldwide lie behind marriage markets, reproductive practices, generational availability, coexistence probabilities, intergenerational exchange and new and different familial arrangements. Increases in life expectancy and changes in the timing and number of children lead social actors to reconsider gender and generational roles; the solidarity among generations has another background and acquires different meanings; although there has been an increase in gender equality, it has come with an increased social inequality within the countries and among them. Demographic processes are an inherent part of social processes, and the age structure of the populations constitutes the human and biological basis for the analysis of social behaviors that these populations choose to reproduce, as well as for the understanding of the differences in the distribution of resources into and between countries, genders, generations and social groups.

Contents

Structural crisis changes family How people and family
12
CHAPTER
20
mediations between structural trends and freedom to choose
43
Following in familys footsteps or going ones own ways?
70
Addams Blumer and Simmel look at LAT relationships
86
Family Changes Under the Conditions of a Destroyed Society
97
generations of real social actors interchange values care and resources
149
The FarReaching Consequences
183
Poverty ageing and family in Mexico
239
Demographic Transitions Family Changes and Social Developments
272
Value of Children and Fertility Strategies in Crosscultural
300
Fertility and Contraception of the Indigenous Rural Women in Mexico
345
The family implications by the 1992 Agrarian Reform The
366
Family through housing
395
Contributors
417
Copyright

An Indian Family Perspective
202

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