Public & Private Families: An IntroductionNationally recognized for its sound scholarship and balanced approach and written by one of the leading authorities in the field, this text examines the family through two lenses: the familiar private family in which we live most of our personal lives, and the public family in which we, as adults, deal with broader societal issues such as the care of the elderly, the increase in divorce, and childbearing outside of marriage. The book looks at intimate personal concerns, such as whether to marry, as well as societal concerns, such as governmental policies that affect families. Distinctive chapters - Chapter 9, Children and Parents; Chapter 10, The Elderly and Their Families; and Chapter 14, The Family, the State and Social Policy - examine issues of great current interest, such as income assistance to poor families, the effects of out-of-home childcare, and the costs of the Social Security and Medicare programs. |
Contents
Part One Introduction | 1 |
The History of the Family | 35 |
17761900 | 46 |
Copyright | |
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abuse adolescents adult children adulthood African American American families American Indian argue Asian Asian American asked baby boom behavior berdaches biological caregivers Census Chapter chil child childbearing cohabiting Cuban cultural decades declined developed domestic violence dren earnings economic elderly emotional ethnic fathers feminist gender differences girls grandchildren grandparents heterosexual Hispanic homosexual household housework husbands immigrants income increased individuals kinship lesbian less living male marriage married couples married women Mexican Mexican American middle-class Moreover mothers networks non-Hispanic whites parents partners percent percentage person perspective poor poverty poverty line private family public family Quick Review racial relationship relatives remarriage role romantic love same-sex sexual identities shows single-parent social class society sociologists spouse stepfamilies stepparent suggest survey teenage tend tion twentieth century U.S. Bureau United unmarried wages wife wives workers www.mhhe.com/cherlin5 young adults