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47065
Unit 1 Sociology
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Sociology Mind Map on Unit 1 Sociology, created by Ap Di on 15/04/2013.
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Resource summary
Unit 1 Sociology
Perspectives
Functionalist
Murdock
Sexual: There are rules limiting sexual relationships outside of marriage, to keep the social system stable
Economic: The family is a unit of production, buying goods and services for the goods, making an important contribution to the wider society
Reproduction: The family is the main unit for reproduction of children, society wouldn't exist without this function
Educational: The family is largely responsible for primary socialisation, without this there would be no culture, and no consensus on norms and values
Criticisms
Ignores the diversity in family life
Parson's view on the family can be considered sexist
The 'dark side' of the family can be ignored
The reality of family life is not the perfect ideal that is pictured by a functionalist
Parsons
The family is the centre of society
New Right
The family is the centre of society
The family is in decline and under threat
Evidence
Lone parent families
Fatherless families
Divorce rates
Cohabitation
Gay and lesbian couples
Causes
Breakdown of traditional family values
Over-generous welfare benifits
The influence of feminism which has devalued the family
Increased sexual permissiveness
Greater tolerance of gay and lesbian relationships
Consequences
Young people may underachieve in school
Welfare dependancy
Lone mothers become 'married to the state'
Soulutions
Returning to traditional family values
A change in government policy, redirecting welfare and social service provision to support and maintain two parent families
Murray (1984)
The welfare state gives 'perverse incentives'
Weakening self reliance
Depndancy culture
Marxist
Conflict between the mass and the small ruling poupulation
The family maintains the position of the ruling class
The economy shapes the rest of the society
Institutions such as the family are shaped around capitalism
Engels (1884)
The modern nuclear family had developed under capitalism
Private property is at the heart of capitalism and most of that is owned by men
Marxist views on what the is family do not deter far from the functionalist view
Criticisms
Many sociologists reject the view of capitalism and therefore marxism
Sociologists disagree that economics shapes the family through its needs
Feminist
Marxist Feminists: Focus on the inequalities of the class system
Radical Feminists: More of a focus on the structure of society
Domestic Labour
The work done by the woman in the house is unpaid labour
Men receive the benefits of this
Marxist feminists say unpaid labour is invaluable to capitalism
Emotional Labour
Radical feminists say that wives provide the emotional support not husbands (Delphy & Leonard, 1992)
Marxist feminists say that the women soak up all the frustrations of working for capitalism
Economic Dependancy
Married women are dependent on the man economically
Mothers often return to part time work not full time
Male Domination
The family is male dominated
Men control key areas of decision making
Domestic violence is widespread, the majority of cases being on women
Diversity
Reconstituted families
Extended and nuclear families
Cultural Diversity
Shared households/families of choice
Conventional married couple families with their own natural dependent children
Differences in roles of men, women and children
Class diversity
Cohabiting families
Lone parent families
Life cycle diversity
Regional diversity
Single person households
Gay and lesbian households
Dual worker families
Demography
Growing Population
1901, population of UK was 38.2 million By mid 2006 it was 60.6 million
Between 1901 and 1911 the growth rate was around 1% In the 21st century it is around 0.25%
Every year since 1901 there have been more births than deaths, except 1976
Migration between 2001 and 2005 resulted in their being an increase of 182,000 people, compared to an average 92,000
Births/Fertility
Actual numbers: The actual number of live births in a population over a given time, 1901 nearly 1.1million, 2005 there were nearly 723,000
Birth Rate: The number of live births per 1,000 of the population of the year, 1900-02 it was 28.6, 2005 it was 12.0
Total Fertility Rate (TFR): The average number of children a woman is expected to have during her lifetime, estimated at 3.5 in 1900, and 1.84 in 2006
Deaths/Mortality
Actual Numbers: The actual number of deaths over a given period, in 1901 it was 632,000, and 2005 it was 582,000
For the population as a whole as the deaths per 1,000, 18.4 in 1900-02, 9.4 in 2005
Infant Mortality Rate: The number of deaths of infants per thousand live births, 142 in 1901, 5.1 in 2005
Life Expectancy
The number of years a person can expect to live
Females: 1901 it was 49.0, 2003-05 it was 86.1
Males: 1901 it was 45.5, 2003-05 it was 76.6
Ageing population
From 1971 to 2006 the population of over 65's grew by 31%, while those under 16 declined by 19%
People are living longer and women are having less children
Family Size
In 2006, 37%of women reaching the age of 45 had a complete family of 2 children
The proportion of women having 3 or more children has fallen from nearly 40% for women born in 1941, to 30%for women born in 1961
Childlessness has also increased in recent years, one in ten women born in 1941 having no children compared with nearly one in five women born in 1961
Childhood
Social Construction of childhood
Childhood is given its meaning through the different cultures that it exists inside of
The way children should behave, be treated change within different societies
Child soldiers in African countries at war would not be an accepted occurance in modern day Westernised culture
Society in the UK molds itself around children
Childhood in History
Ariés (1962)
When the upper classes started to send their children to school in the 16th century, this was the start of childhood
Childhood did not exist the the medieval times, there was nothing between infancy and adulthood
In the 19th century factory acts were introduced to prohibit children working in the factories, with children being physically separated from adults
Our world is obssessed with children
Images of Childhood
The Welfare View
Children are vulnerable and need protecting
The Control View
Children are unable to control their anti-social tendancies
These are social constructions
The Uncertainty of Childhood
Lee (2001)
Both adults and children are in a state of becoming
Growing similarity in children and adults
Children are increasingly seen as beings in their own right
The End of Childhood?
Postman (1983)
There is no such thing as childhood
The mass media has brought the adult world into chioldhood
Television has broken down secracy
Lee (2001): Childhood has become more complex
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