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The Blackwell Companion to the Sociology of Families (Blackwell Companions to Sociology) PDF

613 Pages·2004·3.46 MB·English
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he lackwell ompanion to the T B C ociology of amilies S F BLACKWELL COMPANIONS TO SOCIOLOGY The Blackwell Companions to Sociology provide introductions to emerging topics andtheoreticalorientationsinsociologyaswellaspresentingthescopeandquality ofthedisciplineasitiscurrentlyconfigured.EssaysintheCompanionstacklebroad themesorcentralpuzzleswithinthefieldandareauthoredbykeyscholarswhohave spentconsiderabletimeinresearchandreflectiononthequestionsandcontroversies thathaveactivatedinterestintheirarea.Thisauthoritativeserieswillinterestthose studying sociology at advanced undergraduate or graduate level as well as scholars in thesocial sciences and informedreaders inapplieddisciplines. Series List: 1 The BlackwellCompanionto SocialTheory,Second Edition Edited by Bryan S.Turner 2 The BlackwellCompanionto MajorSocialTheorists Edited by George Ritzer 3 The BlackwellCompanionto Political Sociology Edited by Kate Nash and Alan Scott 4 The BlackwellCompanionto Medical Sociology Edited by WilliamC.Cockerham 5 The BlackwellCompanionto Sociology Edited by Judith R. Blau 6 The BlackwellCompanionto MajorClassical Social Theorists Edited by George Ritzer 7 The BlackwellCompanionto MajorContemporarySocialTheorists Edited by George Ritzer 8 The BlackwellCompanionto Criminology Edited by Colin Sumner 9 The BlackwellCompanionto theSociology ofFamilies Edited by Jacqueline Scott, Judith Treas, and MartinRichards 10 The BlackwellCompanionto SocialMovements Edited by David A. Snow,Sarah A. Soule, and Hanspeter Kriesi Forthcoming The BlackwellCompanion to Social Inequalities Editedby MaryRomeroandEric Margolis The BlackwellCompanion to theSociologyof Culture Editedby MarkJacobsand Nancy Hanrahan The Blackwell Companion to the Sociology of Families Edited by Jacqueline Scott, Judith Treas, and Martin Richards Copyright#2004byBlackwellPublishingLtd except for editorial material and organization # 2004 by Jacqueline Scott, Judith Treas, and Martin Richards 350MainStreet,Malden,MA02148-5020,USA 108CowleyRoad,OxfordOX41JF,UK 550SwanstonStreet,Carlton,Victoria3053,Australia TherightofJacquelineScott,JudithTreas,andMartinRichardstobeidentifiedastheAuthorsofthe EditorialMaterialinthis Workhasbeen assertedinaccordancewiththeUK Copyright, Designs,and PatentsAct1988. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted,inanyformorbyanymeans,electronic,mechanical,photocopying,recordingorotherwise, exceptaspermittedbytheUKCopyright,Designs,andPatentsAct1988,withoutthepriorpermissionof thepublisher. Firstpublished2004byBlackwellPublishingLtd LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData TheBlackwellcompaniontothesociologyoffamilies/editedby JacquelineScott,JudithTreas,andMartinRichards. p.cm.–(Blackwellcompanionstosociology) Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. ISBN0-631-22158-1(hardcover:alk.paper) 1. Family–Research.2. Sociology.I.Scott,JacquelineII.Treas,Judith.III.Richards,Martin.IV.Series. HQ519.B532004 306.85’072–dc21 2003004166 AcataloguerecordforthistitleisavailablefromtheBritishLibrary. Setin10/12ptSabon byKolamInformationServicesPvt.Ltd,Pondicherry,India PrintedandboundintheUnitedKingdom byTJInternationalLtd,Padstow,Cornwall Forfurtherinformationon BlackwellPublishing,visitourwebsite: http://www.blackwellpublishing.com Contents List ofContributors viii Preface xv PART I FAMILIESIN AGLOBALWORLD 1 1 Globalization and Western Bias inFamilySociology Don Edgar,Independent Scholar 3 2 Changing European Families: Trends and Issues Kathleen Kiernan, LondonSchoolof Economics and Political Science 17 3 RecentDemographic Trends inthe USand Implications for Well-Being Sinikka Elliott and DebraUmberson, University of Texas atAustin 34 4 Children, Families, States, and Changing Citizenship Hilary Land, University ofBristol 54 5 Families and LocalCommunities Graham Crow,University of Southampton and Catherine Maclean, Universityof Edinburgh 69 PART II LIFE-COURSE PERSPECTIVES ON THEFAMILY 85 6 Generations, the Life Course, and Family Change J.BethMabry,Indiana Universityof Pennsylvania, Roseann Giarrusso,and Vern L.Bengtson, University of Southern California 87 vi contents 7 Children’s Families Jacqueline Scott, University of Cambridge 109 8 Aging and theLife Course Chris Phillipson andGraham Allan, Keele University 126 9 Parenting Practices Duane F.Alwin, Pennsylvania StateUniversity 142 10 Time, Through theLife Course, in theFamily Jonathan Gershuny, Universityof Essex 158 PARTIII INEQUALITYAND DIVERSITY 179 11 Inequalityand theFamily Philip N. Cohen, University of California,Irvine, and Danielle MacCartney, Independent Scholar 181 12 Families ofthe Poor RobertWalker andClaireCollins, Nottingham University 193 13 Social Capital and the Family Frank F. Furstenbergand Sarah B. Kaplan, University ofPennsylvania 218 14 Family,the State, and Health Care: ChangingRoles inthe New Century Ronald J.AngelandJacqueline L. Angel, University ofTexas atAustin 233 15 ImmigrantFamiliesinthe US Karen Pyke, University ofCalifornia, Riverside 253 16 ImmigrantFamiliesinthe UK AlisonShaw,Brunel University 270 PARTIV CHANGING FAMILYFORMS AND RELATIONSHIPS 287 17 Religion, Romantic Love, and theFamily Bryan S.Turner,University ofCambridge 289 18 Trends inthe Formationand Dissolution of Couples Joanne J.Paetsch, Canadian Research Institute forLaw and the Family,Nicholas M. Bala, Queen’sUniversity, Kingston,Ontario, LorneD. Bertrand, Canadian Research Institute for Lawand the Family,and Lisa Glennon,Queen’sUniversity,Belfast 306 19 Children, Families, and Divorce Jan Pryor,VictoriaUniversity of Wellington, and Liz Trinder,University ofEastAnglia 322 20 The Lesbian and Gay Family Jeffrey Weeks, London South Bank University, Brian Heaphy,Nottingham Treat University,and CatherineDonovam, University ofSunderland 340 contents vii 21 CouplesandTheirNetworks Eric Widmer,University ofGeneva 356 22 Men in Families and Households David H. J.Morgan, IndependentScholar 374 PART V CHANGING SOCIALCONTEXTS 395 23 Sex and Family:Changes and Challenges Judith Treas, University ofCalifornia, Irvine 397 24 Feminism and theFamily Michelle Budig,University ofMassachusetts 416 25 Work and Families Shirley Dex, Instituteof Education, Universityof London 435 26 PublicPolicy and Families WendySigle-Rushton,London Schoolof Economics andPolitical Science, and CatherineKenney, University of Illinois atUrbana–Champaign 457 27 AssistedReproduction,GeneticTechnologies, and FamilyLife MartinRichards,Universityof Cambridge 478 28 Families in aRunaway World Ulrich Beck, University of Munich, and Elisabeth Beck-Gernsheim, University of Erlangen 499 Bibliography 515 Index 584 Contributors Graham Allan is Professor of Social Relations at Keele University. His research mainly focuses on aspects of informal social relationships. He is particularly inter- ested in the sociology of friendship, family and domestic life, kinship, and commu- nity,andhaswrittenwidelyonthesesubjects.Hiscurrentresearchincludesprojects on stepfamily kinship and on maritalaffairs. Duane F. Alwin is the McCourtney Professor of Sociology, Demography, and Human Development at Pennsylvania State University. He is completing work on a research monograph related to his contribution in this volume on the impact of changes in the American family over the past century entitled The Disciplined Self: TransformationsofChild-RearinginAmericanSocietyOvertheTwentiethCentury. Inadditiontofamiliesandchildren, thefocus ofhisteaching and research includes the study of aging and the life-course, the development and change in social and political attitudes over the life span, and the linkages between historical events, socialization processes, and social change. Ronald J. Angel is Professor of Sociology at the University of Texas at Austin. His research focuses on social policy, poverty, and the family, with special emphasis on the Hispanic population. He is currently working on a project related to welfare reform and the health-care coverage of poor families in Boston, Chicago, and San Antonio, and a project related to the health of older Mexican Americans in the Southwest. Jacqueline L. Angel is Associate Professor of Public Affairs and Sociology at the UniversityofTexasatAustin.Herresearchaddressesthehealthandeconomicsecurity ofAmericanfamilies.Sheisparticularlyinterestedinpublicpoliciesinfluencingthe well-being of the Hispanic population. Her books include Who Will Care For Us?: AgingandLong-TermCareinMulticulturalAmerica(1997)andPainfulInheritance; HealthandtheNewGenerationofFatherlessFamilies(withRonaldAngel,1993). contributors ix NicholasM.BalahasbeenaProfessorattheFacultyofLawatQueen’sUniversity, Kingston,Ontario,since1980andhasbeenavisitingprofessorattheUniversityof Calgary and McGill and Duke Universities. His primary area of teaching and research interest is family and children’s law, focusing on such issues as juvenile justice, child abuse and child witnesses, domestic violence, parental rights and responsibilities after divorce, spousal support obligations, and the legal definition of the family. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Canadian Research Institute forLaw and theFamily. Ulrich Beck is Professor for Sociology at the University of Munich, and the British Journal of Sociology Visiting Centennial Professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He is chief-editor of Soziale Welt and editorofZweiteModerneatSuhrkamp(FrankfurtamMain).Hisinterestsfocuson ‘‘risk society,’’ ‘‘individualization,’’ ‘‘reflexive modernization,’’ and ‘‘cosmopolitan society and sociology.’’ He is the director of a research center at the University of Munich (in cooperation with four other universities in the area) – Reflexive Modernization–financedsince1999bytheDFG(GermanResearchSociety). Elisabeth Beck-Gernsheim is Professor for Sociology at the University of Erlangen- Nuremberg. Her research areas are the family, reproductive technology, migration, and ethnicity. Her latest publications in English are Reinventing the Family. In SearchofNewLifestylesand(withUlrichBeck)Individualization.Institutionalized Individualism and its Socialand Political Consequences (both 2002). Vern L. Bengtson is Professor of Sociology and AARP/University Professor of Gerontology at the University of Southern California. He has published 12 books andover200articlesintheareasoffamilysociologyandaging.Apastpresidentof theGerontologicalSocietyofAmerica, hestartedtheLongitudinalStudyofGener- ations, a 31-year investigation of multigenerational families, aging, and social change. His most recent book is How Families Still Matter: A Longitudinal Study of Youth in Two Generations (2002). He has received numerous awards, including the Reuben Hill Award (1980 and 1986) and the Ernest W. Burgess Award (1998) from the National Council of Family Relations; the Distinguished Scholar Award from the American Sociological Association (1995); and the Robert W. Kleemeier Award from theGerontologicalSocietyof America (1996). Lorne D. Bertrand is Senior Research Associate at the Canadian Research Institute forLawandtheFamilyattheUniversityofCalgary.HeholdsaBA,anMA,anda Ph.D. in Social Psychology from Carleton University, Ottawa. Since joining the Institute in 1993, he has conducted research projects and published in the areas of adolescentsubstanceuse,youthdelinquencyandjustice,thevictimizationofadults, child support, and child custody and access. MichelleJ.BudigisanAssistantProfessorofSociologyattheUniversityofMassa- chusetts.Herresearchinterestsaregender,labormarkets,workandfamilyconflict, and inequality. Her recent publications investigate the wage penalty for mother- hood,earningsandpromotionsdisparitiesformaleandfemaleoccupationaltokens, theearningspenaltyforcaringlabor,andtherelationshipbetweenwomen’semploy- ment and fertilityhistories. PhilipN.CohenisonthefacultyoftheDepartmentofSociologyattheUniversityof California, Irvine, where he teaches in the areas of social inequality, sociological

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