FAD 2230 FSU Exam 2 Practice Questions and Correct Answers
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Course
FAD 2230
Institution
FAD 2230
Commune Group of adults and perhaps children who live together, sharing aspects of their lives. Some communes are group marriages, in which members share sex; others are communal families, with several monogamous couples, who share everything except sexual relations and their children
Domestic Par...
FAD 2230 FSU Exam 2 Practice
Questions and Correct Answers
Commune ✅Group of adults and perhaps children who live together, sharing aspects
of their lives. Some communes are group marriages, in which members share sex;
others are communal families, with several monogamous couples, who share
everything except sexual relations and their children
Domestic Partnership ✅Arrangement in which an unmarried couple registers their
partnership with a civil authority and then enjoys some rights, benefits, and entitlements,
traditionally reserved for marrieds.
Civil Unions ✅Legislation that allows any two single adults-including same-sex
partners or blood relatives, such as siblings or a parent and adult child-to have access
to virtually all marriage rights and benefits on the state level, but none on the federal
level. Designed to give same-sex couples many of the legal benefits of marriage while
denying them the right to legally marry.
Intermittent Cohabitation ✅Relationships in which parenting couples in together, then
out, then back in.
Selection Effects ✅When individuals "select" themselves into a category being
investigated
Consensual Marriages ✅Heterosexual, conjugal unions that have not gone through a
legal marriage ceremony
Cohabitation ✅Living together in an intimate, sexual relationship without traditional,
legal marriage. Sometimes referred to as living together or marriage without marriage,
cohabitation can be a courtship process or an alternative to legal marriage, depending
on how partners view it.
Boomerangers ✅Adults who leave home and then return to live with their parents
Living apart together (LAT) ✅Emerging lifestyle choice in which a couple is committed
to a long-term relationship but each partner maintains a separate dwelling.
Emerging adulthood ✅Fairly new life cycle stage typically defined as young adults
ages 18 to 29 who spend more time in higher education or exploring options regarding
work, career, and family making than in the past.
sex ratio ✅The number of men per 100 women in society. If the sex ratio is above 100,
there are more men than women; if it is below 100, there are more women than men.
, Individualistic ✅Society in which the main concern is with one's own interests (which
may or may not include those of one's immediate family).
Collectivist ✅A society in which people identify with and conform to the expectations of
their relatives or clan, who look after their interests in return for their loyalty. The group
has priority over the individual. Also known as communal society
Communal ✅A society in which people identify with and conform to the expectations of
their relatives or clan, who look after their interests in return for their loyalty. The group
has priority over the individual. Also known as collectivist
individualism ✅The cultural milieu that emerged in Europe with industrialization and
that values personal self-actualization and happiness along with individual freedom
Swinging ✅A marriage agreement in which couples exchange partners to engage in
purely recreational sex.
Polyamory ✅A marriage system in which one or both spouses retain the option to
sexually love others in addition to their spouses.
Expectations of sexual exclusivity ✅The cultural ideal according to which spouses
promise to have sexual relations with only each other.
Polygamy ✅A marriage system in which a person takes more than one spouse
Expectations of permanence ✅One component of the marriage premise, according to
which individuals enter marriage expecting that mutual affection and commitment will be
lasting
Marriage Premise ✅By getting married, partners accept the responsibility to keep each
other primary in their lives and to work hard to ensure that their relationship continues
Marriage Gap ✅Disparity in marriage rates between the poor and those who are not
poor
Heteronormativity ✅The idea that gender is binary-a person is either male or female-
and that heterosexuality is the only normal, acceptable, or "real" option for all individuals
Individualized marriage ✅concept associated with the argument that contemporary
marriage in the United States and other fully industrialized Western societies is no
longer institutionalized. Four interrelated characteristics distinguish this: 1. it is optional,
2.spouses roles are flexible (negotiable and renegotiable),3. its expected rewards
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