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Theoretical perspectives on family change

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In this Chapter we will examine family dynamics and change from a cross-cultural psychological perspective. The main focus will be on family change within changing global social structural and ecocultural contexts. Following the previous Chapter, however, we will start by examining the current Western family with a sociological orientation, for it is the Western family that has served as a prototype for family research in sociology. We will then devote most of our attention to the non-Western family, both in the Majority World and also as immigrant in the Western countries, and try to depict patterns of change that can be explained with a comparative orientation and from an ecocultural perspective. There will also be a presentation of a Model of Family Change (Kağıtçıbaşı, 1990, 1996a) that has proven useful in understanding family patterns in relation to different ecocultural contexts and changes in these. FAMILY RESEARCH AGENDA: THE WESTERN ECOCULTURAL CONTEXT Even a cursory glance at current scholarship on the family brings forth an interesting, even ironic dilemma. While there is a concern regarding the current state and the future of the Western family, which is claimed to be on the decline, at the same time there is a tacit assumption that the family in the non-Western (Majority) world is shifting toward the Western model. As discussed in Chapter 1, this is the main thesis of modernization theory that permeates social science thinking and everyday parlance, even though it has been questioned ever since its inception in 1960s (Bendix, 1967; Gusfield, 1967). © Cambridge University Press 2006.

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Cambridge University Press

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Family studies, Psychology, Social psychology

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Families Across Cultures: A 30-Nation Psychological Study

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10.1017/CBO9780511489822.004

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