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AS Sociology
CHANGING FAMILY   SCLY1

      PATTERNS    Families and
                  Households
GENERAL TRENDS

More…                      Less…
 Divorce                   Traditional nuclear
 Re-marriages               family households
 Cohabitation              First marriages
 Lone parent families      Women having fewer
 People who live alone      children
 Step families
 Couples without
  children
 Marrying later in life
AIMS

 Know the main changes in partnerships – with particular
  reference to divorce and partnerships
 Be able to analyse and evaluate the reason for these changes
  in families and households
WHY STUDY DIVORCE?

 Major cause for changing family patterns and greater family
  diversity

   For example:
   Lone parents
   Re-marriage
   One person households
WHAT IS THE EXTENT OF THE CHANGE?

 Divorce has doubled between 1961 to 1969

 But…doubled again between 1969 and 1972

 Divorce in 2001 was six times higher than in 1961

 7/10 petitions for divorce come from women, but in 1946
  only 37% came from women.

 So what has happened?
EXPLANATIONS FOR THE INCREASE

   Changes in the law
   Declining stigma and changing attitudes
   Secularisation
   Rising expectations in marriage
   Changes in the position of women

   Also other factors
   Higher risk of divorce if…
   Marry young
   Cohabit before marriage
   One or both partners married before
A brief
DIVORCE LAW   history
DIVORCE LAW

 Before 1857 – virtually non-existent, costly and only
  obtainable through an Act of Parliament
 1857 – men could divorce unfaithful wives BUT women had to
  prove husbands’ cruelty or infidelity. Divorce still costly.
 1923 – grounds for divorce equalised for men and women
 1937 – grounds widened to include cruelty and desertion
 1949 – legal aid available making divorce more af fordable
 1969 – Divorce Law Reform Act (came into ef fect in 1971)
This made irretrievable breakdown of marriage the sole ground
for divorce – established by proving unreasonable behaviour,
adultery, desertion, separation. Divorce was available after 2
years of agreed separation or 5 if one partner did not agree.
DIVORCE LAW

 1984 – the minimum period when divorce could be sough was
  reduced from 3 years to 1
 1996 – Family Law Act encourages couples to seek mediation
  but allows divorce after a period of reflection
 2004 – Civil Partnership Act allows the dissolution for civil
  partnerships on the same grounds as for a marriage
 2007 – appeal court ruling, in divorce the principle of equality
  applies – the starting point of the split is 50:50 of all assets
  including salaries and pension rights.
EXPLANATIONS FOR THE   AS
                       Sociology
            CHANGES
CHANGES IN THE LAW




                                         Making divorce
Equal grounds         Widening grounds
                                         cheaper
CHANGES IN THE LAW

 When the grounds were equalised in 1923 – sharp rise in the
  number of divorce petitions from women

 1971 – irretrievable breakdown

 1949 – introduction of legal aid

 Each change has resulted in a rise in the divorce rate
ALTERNATIVES?

 Divorce is the legal termination of the marriage. Couples can and
  do find alternatives…

 Desertion – where one partner leaves the other but the couple
  remain legally married

 Legal separation – when a court separates the financial and
  legal affairs of the couple but they remain married and are not
  free to re-marry

 Empty shell marriage – the couple continue to live under the
  same roof but remain married in name only

 Since divorce has become more available these solutions have
  become less popular.
AS
SOCIAL CHANGES   Sociology
DECLINING STIGMA AND CHANGING
             ATTITUDES

               Stigma is a negative label of social disapproval or shame
               attached to a person, action or relationship.



The church tended to condemn divorce and often
refused to conduct marriage services involving
divorcees.
Mitchell and Goody (1997) note that an important
change since the 1960s has been the rapid decline in
the stigma attached to divorce

As the stigma declines and divorce become more
socially acceptable couples are more likely to see
divorce as a means of solving marital problems. It has
become normalised.
SECULARISATION


                   Secularisation refers to the decline in the influence in
                   religion in society.

                   Many sociologists argue that religious institutions are losing
                   their influence on society. They point to evidence such as
                   church attendance being in decline.


The results are…
The traditional opposition of the church to divorce carries
less weight in society
People are less likely to be influenced by religious teachings    Many churches are
when making decisions.                                            also softening their
                                                                  views on divorce.
2001 census – 47% of those with no religion were
cohabiting compared to 34% of Christians, 17% of Muslims
and 11% of Hindus and 10% of Sikhs.
RISING EXPECTATIONS OF MARRIAGE


                               The higher expectations people place on marriage
                               today are a major cause of rising divorce rates. Higher
                               expectations make couples less willing to tolerate an
                               unhappy marriage.


This is linked to the ideology of romantic love.

Marriage should be based only on love and for each
individual there is a Mr or Miss “right”.
RISING EXPECTATIONS OF MARRIAGE

                  In the past individuals had little choice in whom they
                  married.

                  At the time when the family was a unit of production
                  marriages were often out of duty to one’s family or for
                  economic reasons.



Under these circumstances people were less likely to
have high expectations and were less likely to be
dissatisfied by the absence of romance and intimacy.
RISING EXPECTATIONS OF MARRIAGE



“Love, personal commitment and intrinsic satisfaction are now seen as the
cornerstones of marriage, the absence of these feelings is itself a justification
for ending the relationship.”




   Takes an optimistic view of marriage.

   Marriage continues to be popular, most adults marry and the high number
   of re-marriages show that society has not rejected marriage as in institution.
CRITICS OF THIS VIEW…

 Too rosy!!!!
  feminists argue that the oppression of women within the
 marriage and family is the main cause of marital conflict
 and divorce and think that functionalists ignore this.

 Functionalists offer an explanation for the rise in divorce
 rate but do not explain why it is mainly women who petition
 for divorce.
CHANGES IN THE POSITION OF WOMEN


       One reason that women may seek divorce is due to
       improvements in their economic position.


       Women are more likely to be in paid work.
       47% in 1959 to 70% in 2005

       Anti-discrimination laws have helped to narrow the pay gap

       Girls’ greater success in education how help them to pursue
       different careers

       Welfare benefits mean that women no longer have to remain
       financially depended on their husbands
CHANGES IN THE POSITION OF WOMEN



Marriage less embedded in the economic system

Fewer family firms

Spouses not so financially interdependent

This means that they do not have to tolerate each other in the absence of love –
more willing to seek divorce.

Feminists also argue that the women as wage earners has created a new source
of conflict between husbands and wives and this is leading to more divorce.
FEMINIST VIEW

               Although there has been reform in the work place and education
               (the public sphere) change in the family and home (the private
               sphere) has been much slower.

               Marriage remains patriarchal with men benefitting from the “triple
               shift”



For many women the home compares unfavourably to work

At work women feel valued and at home frustrated due to the pressures of
housework and men's continuing resistance to helping in the home

As more women work, this leaves less time and energy for the emotional work
needed to address the problems – this contributes to divorce.
FEMINIST VIEW



 Working mothers are more likely to petition for divorce than women in
 relationships with a traditional division of labour.

 Where the husband of a working wife is actively involved in housework the
 likelihood of divorce falls to the same levels of those in traditional roles.




Many women feel a growing dissatisfaction with patriarchal marriage, she sees the
evidence that most petitions come from women as evidence of their growing
acceptance of feminist ideas and women becoming more informed of patriarchal
oppression and more confident in rejecting it.
DO SOCIOLOGISTS AGREE?



 See high divorce rate as undesirable as it undermines the traditional nuclear
 family. It creates an underclass of welfare dependent female lone parents and
 leaves boys without the male adult role model they need.




Disagree…they see the high divorce rate as desirable as it shows women breaking
free of the oppression of patriarchy.
DO SOCIOLOGISTS AGREE?



View a high divorce rate as giving individuals the freedom top choose to end a
relationship when it no longer meets their needs. They see it as a cause of greater
family diversity.




A high divorce rate does not prove that marriage is under threat. It is simple a
result of high expectations of marriage. The high rate of re-marriage shows
peoples’ commitment to the idea of marriage.
DO SOCIOLOGISTS AGREE?



They aim to understand what divorce means to the individual.

Morgan (1996) argues that we cannot generalise about the meaning of divorce
because every individual’s interpretation is different.

Mitchell and Goody provide an example of this. One of their interview was
described the day her father left as one of the happiest in her life, where another
said she had never recovered from her father deserting the family.

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  • 1. AS Sociology CHANGING FAMILY SCLY1 PATTERNS Families and Households
  • 2. GENERAL TRENDS More… Less…  Divorce  Traditional nuclear  Re-marriages family households  Cohabitation  First marriages  Lone parent families  Women having fewer  People who live alone children  Step families  Couples without children  Marrying later in life
  • 3. AIMS  Know the main changes in partnerships – with particular reference to divorce and partnerships  Be able to analyse and evaluate the reason for these changes in families and households
  • 4. WHY STUDY DIVORCE?  Major cause for changing family patterns and greater family diversity  For example:  Lone parents  Re-marriage  One person households
  • 5. WHAT IS THE EXTENT OF THE CHANGE?  Divorce has doubled between 1961 to 1969  But…doubled again between 1969 and 1972  Divorce in 2001 was six times higher than in 1961  7/10 petitions for divorce come from women, but in 1946 only 37% came from women.  So what has happened?
  • 6. EXPLANATIONS FOR THE INCREASE  Changes in the law  Declining stigma and changing attitudes  Secularisation  Rising expectations in marriage  Changes in the position of women  Also other factors  Higher risk of divorce if…  Marry young  Cohabit before marriage  One or both partners married before
  • 8. DIVORCE LAW  Before 1857 – virtually non-existent, costly and only obtainable through an Act of Parliament  1857 – men could divorce unfaithful wives BUT women had to prove husbands’ cruelty or infidelity. Divorce still costly.  1923 – grounds for divorce equalised for men and women  1937 – grounds widened to include cruelty and desertion  1949 – legal aid available making divorce more af fordable  1969 – Divorce Law Reform Act (came into ef fect in 1971) This made irretrievable breakdown of marriage the sole ground for divorce – established by proving unreasonable behaviour, adultery, desertion, separation. Divorce was available after 2 years of agreed separation or 5 if one partner did not agree.
  • 9. DIVORCE LAW  1984 – the minimum period when divorce could be sough was reduced from 3 years to 1  1996 – Family Law Act encourages couples to seek mediation but allows divorce after a period of reflection  2004 – Civil Partnership Act allows the dissolution for civil partnerships on the same grounds as for a marriage  2007 – appeal court ruling, in divorce the principle of equality applies – the starting point of the split is 50:50 of all assets including salaries and pension rights.
  • 10. EXPLANATIONS FOR THE AS Sociology CHANGES
  • 11. CHANGES IN THE LAW Making divorce Equal grounds Widening grounds cheaper
  • 12. CHANGES IN THE LAW  When the grounds were equalised in 1923 – sharp rise in the number of divorce petitions from women  1971 – irretrievable breakdown  1949 – introduction of legal aid  Each change has resulted in a rise in the divorce rate
  • 13. ALTERNATIVES?  Divorce is the legal termination of the marriage. Couples can and do find alternatives…  Desertion – where one partner leaves the other but the couple remain legally married  Legal separation – when a court separates the financial and legal affairs of the couple but they remain married and are not free to re-marry  Empty shell marriage – the couple continue to live under the same roof but remain married in name only  Since divorce has become more available these solutions have become less popular.
  • 14. AS SOCIAL CHANGES Sociology
  • 15. DECLINING STIGMA AND CHANGING ATTITUDES Stigma is a negative label of social disapproval or shame attached to a person, action or relationship. The church tended to condemn divorce and often refused to conduct marriage services involving divorcees. Mitchell and Goody (1997) note that an important change since the 1960s has been the rapid decline in the stigma attached to divorce As the stigma declines and divorce become more socially acceptable couples are more likely to see divorce as a means of solving marital problems. It has become normalised.
  • 16. SECULARISATION Secularisation refers to the decline in the influence in religion in society. Many sociologists argue that religious institutions are losing their influence on society. They point to evidence such as church attendance being in decline. The results are… The traditional opposition of the church to divorce carries less weight in society People are less likely to be influenced by religious teachings Many churches are when making decisions. also softening their views on divorce. 2001 census – 47% of those with no religion were cohabiting compared to 34% of Christians, 17% of Muslims and 11% of Hindus and 10% of Sikhs.
  • 17. RISING EXPECTATIONS OF MARRIAGE The higher expectations people place on marriage today are a major cause of rising divorce rates. Higher expectations make couples less willing to tolerate an unhappy marriage. This is linked to the ideology of romantic love. Marriage should be based only on love and for each individual there is a Mr or Miss “right”.
  • 18. RISING EXPECTATIONS OF MARRIAGE In the past individuals had little choice in whom they married. At the time when the family was a unit of production marriages were often out of duty to one’s family or for economic reasons. Under these circumstances people were less likely to have high expectations and were less likely to be dissatisfied by the absence of romance and intimacy.
  • 19. RISING EXPECTATIONS OF MARRIAGE “Love, personal commitment and intrinsic satisfaction are now seen as the cornerstones of marriage, the absence of these feelings is itself a justification for ending the relationship.” Takes an optimistic view of marriage. Marriage continues to be popular, most adults marry and the high number of re-marriages show that society has not rejected marriage as in institution.
  • 20. CRITICS OF THIS VIEW… Too rosy!!!! feminists argue that the oppression of women within the marriage and family is the main cause of marital conflict and divorce and think that functionalists ignore this. Functionalists offer an explanation for the rise in divorce rate but do not explain why it is mainly women who petition for divorce.
  • 21. CHANGES IN THE POSITION OF WOMEN One reason that women may seek divorce is due to improvements in their economic position. Women are more likely to be in paid work. 47% in 1959 to 70% in 2005 Anti-discrimination laws have helped to narrow the pay gap Girls’ greater success in education how help them to pursue different careers Welfare benefits mean that women no longer have to remain financially depended on their husbands
  • 22. CHANGES IN THE POSITION OF WOMEN Marriage less embedded in the economic system Fewer family firms Spouses not so financially interdependent This means that they do not have to tolerate each other in the absence of love – more willing to seek divorce. Feminists also argue that the women as wage earners has created a new source of conflict between husbands and wives and this is leading to more divorce.
  • 23. FEMINIST VIEW Although there has been reform in the work place and education (the public sphere) change in the family and home (the private sphere) has been much slower. Marriage remains patriarchal with men benefitting from the “triple shift” For many women the home compares unfavourably to work At work women feel valued and at home frustrated due to the pressures of housework and men's continuing resistance to helping in the home As more women work, this leaves less time and energy for the emotional work needed to address the problems – this contributes to divorce.
  • 24. FEMINIST VIEW Working mothers are more likely to petition for divorce than women in relationships with a traditional division of labour. Where the husband of a working wife is actively involved in housework the likelihood of divorce falls to the same levels of those in traditional roles. Many women feel a growing dissatisfaction with patriarchal marriage, she sees the evidence that most petitions come from women as evidence of their growing acceptance of feminist ideas and women becoming more informed of patriarchal oppression and more confident in rejecting it.
  • 25. DO SOCIOLOGISTS AGREE? See high divorce rate as undesirable as it undermines the traditional nuclear family. It creates an underclass of welfare dependent female lone parents and leaves boys without the male adult role model they need. Disagree…they see the high divorce rate as desirable as it shows women breaking free of the oppression of patriarchy.
  • 26. DO SOCIOLOGISTS AGREE? View a high divorce rate as giving individuals the freedom top choose to end a relationship when it no longer meets their needs. They see it as a cause of greater family diversity. A high divorce rate does not prove that marriage is under threat. It is simple a result of high expectations of marriage. The high rate of re-marriage shows peoples’ commitment to the idea of marriage.
  • 27. DO SOCIOLOGISTS AGREE? They aim to understand what divorce means to the individual. Morgan (1996) argues that we cannot generalise about the meaning of divorce because every individual’s interpretation is different. Mitchell and Goody provide an example of this. One of their interview was described the day her father left as one of the happiest in her life, where another said she had never recovered from her father deserting the family.