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Unit 1: Families and Households
(6) Social Policy and the Family
Social Policy and the Family (Intro)
• Social policies: are the measures taken by state
bodies such as schools and welfare agencies
• They are usually based on laws introduced by
government
• Laws and policies can have both direct and
indirect effects on the family:
1. Direct effects
2. Indirect effect
1. Direct effects
• Some policies are aimed specifically at family
life – e.g. laws on marriage, divorce, child
protection, contraception and abortion
2. Indirect effects
• Policies on other social or economic issues
also affect the family –
• E.g. Compulsory schooling provides childcare
for working parents but also keeps children
dependent financially for longer
Application
• In essays on policy, you need to give examples
of different policies and how they affect
family life – so learn a range of them
Perspectives on policy and the
family
Different perspectives have different views on the relationship between social
policy and the family
Functionalism
• Functionalists see society based on value
consensus
• The state acts in the interests of the whole of
society and its policies benefit everyone
• Policies HELP the family to perform its functions –
socialising children, caring for the welfare of its
members etc.
• There is a ‘march of progress’ – policies are
gradually improving family life; e.g. the welfare
state enables families to look after their members
better, through access to the NHS etc.
Evaluation
• Functionalism assumes policies benefit
everyone, but feminists argue they benefit
only men
• It also assumes policies make family
better, but they can also make it worse, e.g.
cutting benefits to poor families
The New Right
• The New Right is a conservative political perspective
that opposes state intervention in family life
• It has a major influence on social policy
It sees the traditional nuclear family as ‘natural’ and
based on a biological division of labour between
male breadwinner and female nurturer
If parents perform these roles properly, the family
will be self-reliant, able to socialise children
effectively and to care for its members
It opposes family diversity and sees lone-parent and
same-sex families as damaging to children
cont. The New Right
• THE PROBLEM:
• The New Right criticise many welfare policies for
undermining the family’s self-reliance by proving
generous benefits, e.g. to lone parent families
 This results in a ‘DEPENDENCY CULTURE’
where individuals depend on the state to
support their families
Murray (1984): ‘Perverse incentives’
Murray (a New Right thinker): sees benefits as
‘PERVERSE INCENTIVES’ rewarding
irresponsible behaviour –
• E.g. If the state provides benefits to lone-
parent families
cont. The New Right
• THE SOLUTION:
• The New Right favour cutting welfare
spending, especially universal benefits
• This will give fathers more incentive to provide
for their families
• Unlike functionalists, who sees policies
benefiting the family, the New Right believe
that the less families depend on the state, the
better
Evaluation
• Feminists criticise New Right views as an
attempt to justify the patriarchal nuclear
family that oppresses women
• They argue that the nuclear family is NOT
‘natural’ but socially constructed
The New Labour
• New Labour is a political perspective
• LIKE the New Right, it favours the traditional
family as usually the best place to raise
children, and prefer means-tested benefits
targeted at the poor rather than universal benefits
• However, UNLIKE the New Right:
It is more accepting of family diversity –
- E.g. it introduced the Civil Partnership Act and
legislation to allow co-habiting couples to adopt
It believes some policies can improve family life
- E.g. extra benefits for poor families
Analysis
• You can score analysis marks by showing
the similarities and/or differences
between different theories
Feminism
• Feminist is a conflict perspective
• It see society based on a conflict of interests between men
and women
• Society is patriarchal – male dominated
 Social policies often shape or define family life in ways that
benefit men and maintain patriarchy, disadvantaging
women and maintaining their subordination
 Land (1978) argues that policies often assume the
patriarchal family to be the norm
• As a result, policies act as a self-fulfilling prophecy, actually
helping to reproduce this family type
• For example, maternity leave is much longer than paternity
leave, reinforcing women’s responsibility for childcare
Evaluation
• NOT ALL policies maintain patriarchy –
• E.g. women’s refuges, laws against rape
in marriage
• In Sweden, policies treat women as
individuals, NOT dependants
Marxism
• Marxism is a conflict perspective
• It sees society as divided into two classes, in
which the capitalist class exploit the working
class by paying them less than the value of what
they produce
• All social institutions – including policies – serve
the interests of capitalism, e.g. the low levels of
benefits for the old maintains on the cheap
those who can no longer be used to produce
profits
cont. Marxism
• Policies affecting families often result from the
needs of capitalism, for example:
• IN World War 2, women were needed as a
reserve army of labour and so the government set
up nurseries to enable them to work
• AFTER the War, women were no longer needed
and the nurseries were closed, forcing them back
into the housewife role and dependence on their
husbands
 This shows how policies serve the needs of
capitalism and how this may affect families
Interpretation
• In essays on how policies affect the
family, you need to discuss them in the
context of different perspectives

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GCE Sociology Revision (AQA)- Unit 1 Social Policy and the Family (6)

  • 1. Unit 1: Families and Households (6) Social Policy and the Family
  • 2. Social Policy and the Family (Intro) • Social policies: are the measures taken by state bodies such as schools and welfare agencies • They are usually based on laws introduced by government • Laws and policies can have both direct and indirect effects on the family: 1. Direct effects 2. Indirect effect
  • 3. 1. Direct effects • Some policies are aimed specifically at family life – e.g. laws on marriage, divorce, child protection, contraception and abortion
  • 4. 2. Indirect effects • Policies on other social or economic issues also affect the family – • E.g. Compulsory schooling provides childcare for working parents but also keeps children dependent financially for longer
  • 5. Application • In essays on policy, you need to give examples of different policies and how they affect family life – so learn a range of them
  • 6. Perspectives on policy and the family Different perspectives have different views on the relationship between social policy and the family
  • 7. Functionalism • Functionalists see society based on value consensus • The state acts in the interests of the whole of society and its policies benefit everyone • Policies HELP the family to perform its functions – socialising children, caring for the welfare of its members etc. • There is a ‘march of progress’ – policies are gradually improving family life; e.g. the welfare state enables families to look after their members better, through access to the NHS etc.
  • 8. Evaluation • Functionalism assumes policies benefit everyone, but feminists argue they benefit only men • It also assumes policies make family better, but they can also make it worse, e.g. cutting benefits to poor families
  • 9. The New Right • The New Right is a conservative political perspective that opposes state intervention in family life • It has a major influence on social policy It sees the traditional nuclear family as ‘natural’ and based on a biological division of labour between male breadwinner and female nurturer If parents perform these roles properly, the family will be self-reliant, able to socialise children effectively and to care for its members It opposes family diversity and sees lone-parent and same-sex families as damaging to children
  • 10. cont. The New Right • THE PROBLEM: • The New Right criticise many welfare policies for undermining the family’s self-reliance by proving generous benefits, e.g. to lone parent families  This results in a ‘DEPENDENCY CULTURE’ where individuals depend on the state to support their families
  • 11. Murray (1984): ‘Perverse incentives’ Murray (a New Right thinker): sees benefits as ‘PERVERSE INCENTIVES’ rewarding irresponsible behaviour – • E.g. If the state provides benefits to lone- parent families
  • 12. cont. The New Right • THE SOLUTION: • The New Right favour cutting welfare spending, especially universal benefits • This will give fathers more incentive to provide for their families • Unlike functionalists, who sees policies benefiting the family, the New Right believe that the less families depend on the state, the better
  • 13. Evaluation • Feminists criticise New Right views as an attempt to justify the patriarchal nuclear family that oppresses women • They argue that the nuclear family is NOT ‘natural’ but socially constructed
  • 14. The New Labour • New Labour is a political perspective • LIKE the New Right, it favours the traditional family as usually the best place to raise children, and prefer means-tested benefits targeted at the poor rather than universal benefits • However, UNLIKE the New Right: It is more accepting of family diversity – - E.g. it introduced the Civil Partnership Act and legislation to allow co-habiting couples to adopt It believes some policies can improve family life - E.g. extra benefits for poor families
  • 15. Analysis • You can score analysis marks by showing the similarities and/or differences between different theories
  • 16. Feminism • Feminist is a conflict perspective • It see society based on a conflict of interests between men and women • Society is patriarchal – male dominated  Social policies often shape or define family life in ways that benefit men and maintain patriarchy, disadvantaging women and maintaining their subordination  Land (1978) argues that policies often assume the patriarchal family to be the norm • As a result, policies act as a self-fulfilling prophecy, actually helping to reproduce this family type • For example, maternity leave is much longer than paternity leave, reinforcing women’s responsibility for childcare
  • 17. Evaluation • NOT ALL policies maintain patriarchy – • E.g. women’s refuges, laws against rape in marriage • In Sweden, policies treat women as individuals, NOT dependants
  • 18. Marxism • Marxism is a conflict perspective • It sees society as divided into two classes, in which the capitalist class exploit the working class by paying them less than the value of what they produce • All social institutions – including policies – serve the interests of capitalism, e.g. the low levels of benefits for the old maintains on the cheap those who can no longer be used to produce profits
  • 19. cont. Marxism • Policies affecting families often result from the needs of capitalism, for example: • IN World War 2, women were needed as a reserve army of labour and so the government set up nurseries to enable them to work • AFTER the War, women were no longer needed and the nurseries were closed, forcing them back into the housewife role and dependence on their husbands  This shows how policies serve the needs of capitalism and how this may affect families
  • 20. Interpretation • In essays on how policies affect the family, you need to discuss them in the context of different perspectives