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Sociology of Families
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Sociology of Families
Change, Continuity, and Diversity

Second Edition


August 2021 | 320 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc

Sociology of Families: Change, Continuity, and Diversity offers students an engaging introduction to sociological thinking about contemporary families in the United States. By incorporating discussions of diversity and inequality into every chapter, author Teresa Ciabattari highlights how structures of inequality based on social divisions such as gender, race, and sexuality shape the institution of the family. The Second Edition has been updated to include the most recent data and statistics, expanded coverage of childhood and parenting, and a new chapter on family violence.

Included with this text

  • The online resources for your text are available via the password-protected Instructor Resource Site. Learn more.

 
1. Introduction
 
2. Defining Family
 
3. Sociological Methods and Theories in the Study of Families
 
4. Young Adults and the Transition to Adulthood
 
5. Marriage and Cohabitation
 
6. Divorce and Relationship Dissolution
 
7. Childhood
 
8. Parenting
 
9. Family Work
 
10. Family Lives of Older Adults
 
11. Family Violence
 
12. Social Policy and the Future of Families

Supplements

Instructor Resource Site
edge.sagepub.com/ciabattari2e

The open-access Student Study Site makes it easy for students to maximize their study time, anywhere, anytime. It offers flashcards that strengthen understanding of key terms and concepts, as well as learning objectives that reinforce the most important material.

For additional information, custom options, or to request a personalized walkthrough of these resources, please contact your sales representative.
Student Study Site
edge.sagepub.com/ciabattari2e

The open-access Student Study Site makes it easy for students to maximize their study time, anywhere, anytime. It offers flashcards that strengthen understanding of key terms and concepts, as well as learning objectives that reinforce the most important material.

For additional information, custom options, or to request a personalized walkthrough of these resources, please contact your sales representative.

Adopted for Fall 2023 but keeping options open for Spring

Dr JoAnna Boudreaux
Communication Dept, University Of Memphis
July 18, 2023

Students prefer hard copies

Miss Paula Ledson
Teaching, Learning and Standards, Riverside College Halton
August 22, 2022
Key features

NEW TO THIS EDITION:

  • A new chapter on Family Violence examines child abuse and neglect, intimate partner violence, and elder abuse. Utilizing research statistics, the chapter identifies the cultural and structural norms that create conditions for family violence.
  • Chapter 7 is dedicated to childhood, enabling students to examine how ideologies of childhood have changed over time, how children are socialized, and how children's experiences of childhood are shaped by race, class, and gender.
  • Chapter 8 explores changing parenting ideologies such as how parenting is gendered, raced, and classed, as well as the unique experiences of immigrant and LGBTQ parents.
  • Significant revisions and updates throughout the nine other chapters include cutting-edge sociological thinking about U.S. families, the most recent data and statistics, and expanded coverage of how families are impacted by structural inequalities.
KEY FEATURES:
  • Rather than creating a separate chapter on changes in the family as a social institution, the themes of change and continuity are carried throughout the book. This format encourages students to consider both the ways that contemporary families have changed and the ideological and behavioral threads that link today’s American families with those of the past.
  • Gender, sexuality, race, and social class are discussed in every chapter, enabling students to apply these factors to their study of families. For instance, the “Marriage and Cohabitation” chapter looks at marriage rates for different racial and ethnic groups; how the breakdown of social distance among groups is increasing rates of interracial marriage; and the connections between social class markers (education, occupation, income) and marriage markers.
  • Chapter 2 is devoted to four different approaches to defining “family,” and demonstrates how our ideas about family shift when we move extended families to the center of analysis.
  • Chapter 3 surveys the main theories and methods used by sociologists to study families and provides a strong foundation for the remainder of the text.
  • Chapter 4 considers the topics of first sexual experiences and romantic partnerships in the larger context of the transition to adulthood.
  • The author provides a wealth of quantitative and qualitative data, in the form of tables and graphs, to support her arguments about family change and continuity.

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