Changing attitudes to
marriage- individuals can
choose the type of
relationship they want
(quality)
Evaluation- greater freedom
of choice=greater risk of
instability
Secularisation- the decline of influence
of religion, means people can choose
not to marry
Evaluation- majority of first-time marriages
take place within a religious context (still has
influence)
Declining stigma attached to alternative to marriage- cohabitation,
remaining single are now accepted e.g. 70% people believed that
couples need marriage to have children (1989), 42% (2012)
Evaluation- most couple who cohabit do tend to get married,
average age of marriage has increased
Fear of Divorce- fewer people are likely to
rush into marriage, or not marry to at all
Evaluation- 1/3 of marriages are
remarriages, leading to serial
monogamy
Changing position of women- Wilkinson
states a "gender quake" has happened,
young females no longer prioritise
marriage/children, instead education/careers
Evaluation- put off getting married
until career is established, average
age of married has increased
Cohabitation
Unmarried couple in a sexual
relationship living together
Fastest growing family type- 3.3 million in 2016
(increase of 25.8% 2008-2018)
Allan & Crow- difficulty researching cohabiting couples
as moving in together is often gradual
Chandler- long-term alternative to
marriage- no longer feel pressure to
get married before starting a family
The New Right are concerned about the
rise as they claim they're less stable than
marriages (less happy/fulfilled, more
abusive/stressed
Chester- cohabiting is part of the process
of getting married (temporary)
Coast- 75% of cohabiting couples expect
to get married
Same-Sex Relationships
Stonewall- gay rights, estimates that 5-7% of
the population are gay
Civil Partnership Act 2004- same-sex couples could obtain
legal recognition
Tax allowance
Employment benefits
Protection of domestic abuse
recognition from immigration &
nationality purposes
Inheritance, pensions and property
Apply for parental
responsibility
Adoption & Children Act 2002- same rights to adopt
Weston- quasi-marriage (basically
married), deciding to cohabit as
stable partners
Einasdottir- people fear marriage may limit the
flexibility, rather than adopting heterosexual norms,
they want to be different
Divorce
Divorce Reform Act (1969)- easier to obtain,
irretrievable breakdown meaning no fault is
needed to get a divorce
Increasing divorce rate
Changes in law-
equalising/widening the
grounds, making divorce
cheaper
Declining Stigma- Mitchell & Goody: rapid
decline in the stigma attached to divorce-
more socially accepted and normalised
Higher expectations of marriage- if the people
grow apart, there's no justification to stay,
confluent love
Women's increased financial
independence- prioritising careers
and education, rather than marriage,
no longer need to rely on husband
for money
Rise of feminism- argue that marriage benefits
men more, creates conflict, growing
dissatisfaction in patriarchal marriage
Individualisation- the traditional norms lose their hold over
individuals, change from independent to fitting into a mold
Perspectives
The New Right- undermines
marriages & traditions of
nuclear family
Feminists- women breaking free
from the patriarchal family, Bernard-
growing dissatisfaction
Postmodernist- Giddens: liberating but
disruptive as it reflects on their identity
Functionlists- Fletcher: threat to marriage as a social
institution, result of higher expectations
Interactionlists- what divorce means to the individual
Personal Life Perspective- cause problems and lack
of contact between children & parent, Smart:
divorce is normalised & people can adapt
Marxists- marriage
bourgeois concept, so
people are escaping from
this
Family Structure
Single Households- increase in
divorce, decline in the number
marrying, choosing to live alone
Living Apart Together- Duncan & Philips: 1 in
10 do this, choosing to live apart
Childbearing- 4/10 are born outside of
marriage, women are having children later/
fewer/childless
Reasons for changes
Decline in stigma- less than 1/3 of 23-54
years old people thinks that marriage
should become before parenthood
Decline in births- lower fertility rate as
women are having children later
Rise in the position of women- many
women are establishing a career
before having children if they do at all
Single parent families- 14.9%
of all families
Step families- 10% of all families, children from
past relationships, divorce, lone parents form
partnerships
Ethnic Difference in Family-
immigration, traditions have changed
family patterns e.g. South Asian
families are largely extended
Modernism and Nuclear families
Local extended family-
members live together
Dispersed extended family- live far away
but maintained through technology
Attenuated Extended Family- single people
might move away from their kin