Cultural Anthropology/Social Institutions/Family

According to Bonvillain (2010: 211), family is a “basic unit of economic cooperation and stability” that generally includes at least one parent or parent substitute and children. Families provide both economic and social support for its members. It is the primary group responsible for rearing children and is where the enculturation process begins. The children in the family are not always the biological offspring. Through the process of adoption, children who have lost their biological parents for whatever reason, may be adopted by other family members or strangers. This practice ensures that children without parents are cared for and not a burden on the rest of society. In some places, children are “adopted out” due to economic hardships facing the family.

Postmarital Residence Patterns
One thing that may help define a family is their place of residence after the parents are married. There are several types of residence patterns:

Patrilocal: In this residence patterns the newlyweds live with or near the husband’s family. This is the most common form found in the world. It is common in societies where solidarity of the male group important; e.g., where there is heavy labor to be done or frequent warfare. Many cultures in the Persian Gulf region and North Africa are patrilocal.

Matrilocal: This, the 2nd most common residence pattern, is found in societies where the newly married couple moves in with or near the bride’s family. This is found in gardening societies (horticulturalists) or groups wehre warfare occurs with distant peoples and not near neighbors. The Hopi of the American Southwest are one example of a matrilocal group.

Bilocal (ambilocal): This type of residence pattern is the bilocal or ambilocal pattern. In this practice the bride and groom pick which family to go live with or near. It is found in societies where extended kin networks important and where land may be limited. The !Kung Bushmen are bilocal.

Neolocal: For this residence pattern, which is common in industrial societies, newlyweds live separate from both the bride and groom's parents. They are economically independent from their parents. With the export of American culture through modern development, the neolocal residence pattern is becoming increasingly widespread.

Avunculocal: This residence pattern is found only in matrilineal societies like the Trobriand Islanders where men of the family must be cohesive. Usually it forms when warfare is common. This pattern is characterized by the newlyweds living in or near the house of groom’s mother’s brother.

Types of Families
What constitutes a family varies across globe depending on a variety of factors including subsistence practices and economic behaviors. Family defines obligations that group members have to one another, both economically and socially. Generally, family members live together, but that is not always the case.

Family Types
Nuclear family: This is also known as the conjugal family or family of procreation. Nuclear families are comprised of married partners and their offspring. This is common in industrial societies, but not the most common type of family in the world, although the practice is spreading through modern development. Some anthropologists identify a second type of nuclear family, the non-conjugal family. In this type of nuclear family, there is one parent with dependent children. Additionally, there is the polygymous family, which is comprised of multiple spouses and dependent children (Lavenda and Schultz 2010; note that Lavenda and Schultz refer to a polygynous family, not a polygymous family, but that term does not encompass a married woman living with multiple husbands and dependent children).

Extended family: The extended family, the most common type of family in the world. Extended families include at least three generations, grandparents, married offsprings, and grandchildren.

Joint family: Joint families are composed of sets of siblings, theirs spouses and dependent children.

Blended family: Blended families are becoming more common, especially in industrial societies like the United States. A blended family is formed when divorced or widowed parents who have children marry.

Family by Choice: A relatively newly recognized type of family, again especially in industrial countries like the United States, is the family by choice. The term became popularized by the GLBTQ (Gay, Lesbia, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer) community to describe their families not recognized through legal marriage. Family by choice can include adopted children, live-in partners, kin of each member of the household, and close friends. Increasingly family by choice is being practiced by unmarried people and families who move away from the consanguine family.

Video
Review the material (and preview the information on Kinship) by watching these videos: Family &amp; Kinship Part I

Family &amp; Kinship Part II Please note: These videos were originally made for use only by my students. I am in the process of acquiring permission to use the various photos in the video.