ABSTRACT

While the family and its role continues to be a key topic in social and government policy, much of the literature is concerned with describing the dramatic changes that are taking place. By contrast, Analysing Families directly addresses the social processes responsible for these changes - how social policy interacts with what families actually do. Topics covered include:
* the relationship between morality and rationality in the family context
* the variety of contemporary family forms
* the purposes and assumptions of government interventions in family life
* the relationship between different welfare states and different ideas about motherhood
* 'Third Way' thinking on families
* divorce and post-divorce arrangements
* lone parenthood and step-parenting
* the decision to have children
* the economic approach to understanding family process
* the legitimacy of state intervention in family life.
With contributions from the UK, and North America, Analysing Families provides the framework within which to understand an increasingly important element in social policy.

part |2 pages

Part I Introduction

part |2 pages

Part II Perspectives on family policy

chapter 3|26 pages

Political intervention and family policy in Britain

about the existence of an adult worker model and the shift towards contractualism

chapter 6|16 pages

A third way? Moralities, ethics and families

An approach through the ethic of care

part |2 pages

Part III Family practices

chapter 8|18 pages

Policy and rhetoric

The growing interest in fathers and grandparents in Britain

chapter 10|19 pages

The individual in public and private

The significance of mothers and children

chapter 11|11 pages

Elective families

Lesbian and gay life experiments

part |2 pages

Part IV Modelling families

chapter 12|20 pages

Economic theory, norms and the care gap, or

Why do economists become parents?

chapter 13|17 pages

The ‘balance model’: theorising women’s employment behaviour JUDITH G L OV E R

Theorising women’s employment behaviour

part |2 pages

PART V Conclusion