The Family, Marriage, and Social ChangeHeath, 1975 - 579 Seiten A look at the family as an institution of society as well as an intimate environment where people develop their potential as humans. |
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Seite 58
... extended . This is probably a conservative estimate since many nuclear units may be in close proximity to extended family and may follow the lines of defer- ences implied in the definition . Even so , the ideal in this Muslim society is ...
... extended . This is probably a conservative estimate since many nuclear units may be in close proximity to extended family and may follow the lines of defer- ences implied in the definition . Even so , the ideal in this Muslim society is ...
Seite 105
... extended family is antithetical to occupational mobility and thus is not congruent with the demands of a modern industrial society . In its stead Litwak proposed a new terminology , the " modified extended family " : [ It ] differs from ...
... extended family is antithetical to occupational mobility and thus is not congruent with the demands of a modern industrial society . In its stead Litwak proposed a new terminology , the " modified extended family " : [ It ] differs from ...
Seite 149
... extended family system are easier to recognize and document among the nomadic Arab groups that roam the desert areas of the Middle East . For example , Peters ( 1965 ) provided a detailed description of one Bedouin camp that con- tained ...
... extended family system are easier to recognize and document among the nomadic Arab groups that roam the desert areas of the Middle East . For example , Peters ( 1965 ) provided a detailed description of one Bedouin camp that con- tained ...
Inhalt
The Sociological Perspective | 9 |
Conceptual Frameworks for Analysis of the Family | 15 |
Tables | 17 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
affection American areas attitudes birth black family chapter child Clemens Kalischer commitment concept contraceptive courtship cultural dating discussed divorce economic endogamous example experience extended family fact factors families of orientation family of procreation family system father females functions group marriage homogamous husband hypothesis illegitimacy important incest taboo individual influence Islamic kibbutz kibbutzim less live major male marital adjustment marital interaction marital power marital selection married couples mate monogamy mother mutual Negro Nimkoff norms nuclear family occur Oneida Oneida Community orientation parents partners patrilineal percent perhaps person polyandry polygyny population premarital coitus premarital intercourse premarital sexual permissiveness probably problem Reiss relationship relative religious responsibility sample sexual behavior social change social class society sociologists sociology spouse stage status structure Table theory tion traditional United urban usually values variables wheel theory wife wives women