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Families and Households A* essay plans

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Families and Households A* essay plans

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  • April 27, 2023
  • 5
  • 2020/2021
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Essay Plans – Families & Households


Evaluate the contribution of functionalist sociologists to our understanding of the family (20
marks)
Murdock:
 4 functions of the family:
 Stabilisation of the sex drive, prevent social disruption by a sexual ‘free for all’
 Reproduction of the next generation, to continue society
 Meeting each members economic needs - food and shelter
 Socialisation of the young - learning norms and values
 However,
 His view regards the nuclear family as the most practical way to meet these
functions, disregarding other institutions.
 Neglects conflict and exploitation.
 Marxists argue his view favours capitalism, not society as a whole.
 Feminists argue that it favours men via oppressing women.
Parsons:
 Nuclear family fits the needs of industrial society:
 Geographically mobile workforce – nuclear family can move around the country to
where jobs are appearing, as these days industries incline and decline all over.
 Socially mobile workforce – modern society is evolving with new technology and
requires new talent and competence.
 Status no longer ascribed. Requires most talented to get the best jobs.
 Extended family conflict if a son had a higher wok status than his father.
 Argues the extended family worked for pre-industrial.
 However,
 Young and Wilmott found that the nuclear family was the dominant family in pre-
industrial society, not extended as said by Parsons.
 Laslett found that short life expectancies meant grandparents struggled to live ^.
 Comparison can be considered as invalid.
Parental socialisation of their children into gender roles:
 Feminine and masculine roles are (Chapman 2004):
 Masculine – be the breadwinner, learn skills needed to be in the workforce
 Feminine – girls learn to be the house makers and motherly figure.
 Examples etc.
 However,
 Liberal feminists have noted that many young girls now are taught to aim to be a
breadwinner, due to the increase of women in the workforce and lone parent
families.
 Can be argued that girls are no longer socialised into their supposed gender role.




Evaluate the view that, in today’s society, the family is losing its functions (20 marks)

, Essay Plans – Families & Households


Murdock & 4 functions – can be argued that these are now being lost:
 Examples:
 The function of meeting economic needs can now be performed in other ways
through other institutions (welfare state, child benefits and NHS).
 Eliminates the need for the family to be at the forefront of this function
 Prime responsibility for children can now be reduced from the family. Play groups,
nurseries and child minders all exist to perform this need.
 Parents can now focus more on work.
 Socialisation fulfilled by education system instead.
 However, sociologists argue that the family is still pivotal for socialisation. Children
still learn a lot from parents and removing this could impact their ability to
understand the family.
Loss of multi-functional families:
 Families used to have farms to produce food as well as being a unit of consumption.
 Parsons believes as society industrialises, the extended family becomes nuclear and
functions are lost:
 Family becomes only a unit of consumption by using wages to provide food. Instead
of producing it themselves.
 Parsons believes that due to this, the family has 2 irreducible functions:
o Primary socialisation of children – norms and values.
o Stabilisation of human personalities – sexual division of labour, breadwinner
vs house care etc.
 Although the family has lost some functions, it has gained 2.
Traditional functions are phasing out:
 Many traditional functions that have phased out over time, and some that are almost
non-existent today.
 For example:
 Marriage before reproduction – children born to unmarried parents were labelled as
‘bastards’ as they were thought to be conceived illegitimately.
 Now it is common amongst society to have children and sexual relationships,
alongside and outside of marriage – this has increased drastically since the 1970s.
 Cohabitation, lone-parent families, traditional gender roles, women etc.
 Limitations:
o Fletcher argues that the family now has more functions to carry out.
o Believes that introduction of new institutions strengthens the functions of
parental care for children.
o He also says the family plays an important role as a unit of consumption – he
thinks that families regard keeping up with modern goods and living
standards as very important.

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