1. Disorganized and Recognized Families
Submitted To:
Dr. Suman Audichya
Professor
Human Development
& Family Studies
Submitted by :
Km Pratima
Ph.D. Pre. Human
Development & Family
Studies
2. INTRODUCTION
• Family is the most important
primary group. It is the most
universal institution that has
been found in one form or the
other throughout the known
human history.
• Thus the family is a biological
unit having a common
dwelling place for its
members.
• It implies an institutionalized
sex relationship regulating the
relationship between husband
and wife.
3. Continued ……
• Therefore, family is a biological unit implying
institutionalized sex relationship between
husband and wife.
• Family is a universal institution, found in all types
of societies, simple and complex; primitive as well
as modern.
4. Meaning of the family disorganization
In the broadest sense family disorganization may be
thought to include any kind of non-harmonious
functioning within the family.
Thus it may include not only the tensions between the
husband wife and also those arising between parents
and children as well. There fore, the family
disorganization is mostly related to the disorganizations
of the marriage relationships.
Family disorganization can be said as disruption in the
structure and functions of the family unit. It is failure
on the part of the members to fulfill their roles and as
result the failure on the part of the family unit to
perform certain essential functions towards its
members & society
5. DEFINITION
William J Goode defines
“family disorganization is the
break up the family unit when
one or more members are
unwilling or unable to perform
their role obligations
adequately, as these are viewed
by other members.”
6. Causes of family disorganization
The generally known factors or causes may be
classified into two types
family disorganization
Personal factors Impersonal factors
7. Continued………….
Personal Factors:
personal causes are
generally understood as
the subjective factors
that are basically in the
nature of the individual
thinking, feeling,
ideology, orientation,
exposure, physical
Characteristics etc.
8. Impersonal Factors
Economic Reasons
a. Poverty
b. Business Reverses
c. Economic Independence of the Wife
Occupational Reasons
a. Disparity in Age
b. Ill-health
c. Interference of in-laws
9. Economic Reasons-
Involving or pertaining to one's personal resources of
money: to give up a large house for economic reasons.
a-Poverty-
Poverty is a state or condition in which a person or
community lacks the financial resources and essentials for a
minimum standard of living.
b-Business Reverses-
Reverse marketing is the concept of marketing in which the
customer seeks the firm rather than marketers seeking the
customer.
c-Economic Independence of the Wife-
Economic independence is about expanding the capacity of
women to make genuine choices about their lives through
full and equal participation in all spheres of life.
10. Occupational Reasons-
Occupational means relating to a person's job or profession.
Some received substantial occupational assistance in the form
of low-interest loans.
a-Disparity in Age-
Age disparity in sexual relationships is the difference in ages
of individuals in sexual relationships.
b-Ill-health
A condition of inferior health in which some disease or
impairment of function is present but is usually not as serious
in terms of curtailing activity as an illness elderly parents who
are in ill-health and need their financial and personal help.
c-Interference of in-laws-
The first thing you must do in dealing with a toxic or
interfering in-law is to become a united front with your
partner.
11. Some of the causes for
Family disorganization are :
a. Romantic Fallacy
b. Clashing Temperament
c. Philosophy of Life
d. Personal Behaviour Patterns
e. Psychopathic Personalities
f. Problem of Double Standards of
Morality.
12. a. Romantic Fallacy-
The Affective Fallacy (also The Romantic Fallacy):
A fallacy of Pathos, that one's emotions, urges or
“feelings” are in every case self-validating,
autonomous, and above any human intent or act of
will (one's own or others'), and are thus immune to
challenge or critique.
b. Clashing Temperament
A situation in which two or more people have very
different characters and are unable to have a good
relationship with each other.
c. Philosophy of Life-
Philosophy of life is that you should live while you are
alive and you should give others that same privilege.
13. d. Personal Behaviour Patterns-
A complex arrangement of two or more responses that
occur in a prescribed order.
Behavior patterns are also referred to as chains of
behavior, highlighting their nature as a complex
linking of simpler segments of behavior.
e. Psychopathic Personalities-
Psychopathy is traditionally a personality disorder
characterized by persistent antisocial behavior,
impaired empathy and remorse, and bold, disinhibited,
and egotistical traits.
f. Problem of Double Standards of Morality-
A situation in which two people, groups, etc., are
treated very differently from each other in a way that
14.
15. Prevention & Remedial Measures Of
Family Disorganization
1. Education and Literature
2. Family Welfare Agencies
3. Uniform Divorce Laws
4. Stricter Regulation of Marriage
5. Eugenic Marriage Laws
6. The Court of Domestic Relations
7. Raising the Social Ideals of Marriage is
8. Necessary
16. 1. Education and Literature
The education literature describes these areas of learning as domains:
cognitive (knowledge), affective (attitude), and psychomotor (skill).
2. Family Welfare Agencies
Family welfare agencies may provide special housing units or apartment
projects equipped with easy housekeeping facilities and arrangements for
collective use of kitchens, laundries, living rooms libraries or music
room for old people besides, it also provide medical and nursing
supervision and special recreational centres for older citizens.
3. Uniform Divorce Laws
It’s also called uniform divorce laws. The Uniform Civil Code (UCC)
calls for the formulation of one law for India, which would be applicable
to all religious communities in matters such as marriage, divorce,
inheritance, adoption.
4. Stricter Regulation of Marriage
Marriage is chiefly regulated by the states. The Supreme Court has held
that states are permitted to reasonably regulate the institution by
prescribing who is allowed to marry and how the marriage can be
17. Eugenic Marriage Laws
Those laws conditioned marriage licenses on medical examinations
and were designed to save innocent women from lives of misery,
prevent stillbirth or premature death in children, and save future
generations from the myriad afflictions that accompanied "venereal
infection.
The Court of Domestic Relations
The Domestic Relations Division of the Hamilton County Court of
Common Pleas handles cases involving divorce, dissolution, the
care and support of children, and the protection of victims
of domestic violence.
Raising the Social Ideals of Marriage is a social union or legal
contract between spouses that creates kinship. The most frequently
occurring form of marriage is between a woman and a man, where
the feminine term ‘wife’ and the masculine term ‘husband’ are
generally used to describe the parties of the contract.
18. A reorganized family is formed
when one of the spouses may
have been broken through death
of a spouse or divorce. One
spouse or both spouses may
bring into the new family child
or children from former
relationships. In such a family
children may have several half
sisters and half brothers.
Meaning of the reorganized family
19. Individuals who have experience of a
parental divorce deviate from
individuals who lack this experience
on a number of dimensions. Several
negative outcomes in children have
been linked to parental divorce. For
example, family dissolution
negatively affects the children’s
psychological well-being, cognitive
development, social adjustment,
relations to parents (both present and
absent), physical health, and school
achievement (Amato & Keith 1991b;
Demo & Acock 1988; Jonsson &
Gähler 1997; Seltzer 1994).
DEFINITION
20. crisis
• Foster 1957 classifies family crisis into two types:
1.
• Loss of economic support, death, severe and
prolonged illness, accidents and the like.
2.
• Crisis which involve social stigmas like celibacy
and major social calamities like war, economic
inflation and depression.
Reorganization Family Crisis
21. Loss of economic support-
Economic loss is a term of art which refers to
financial loss and damage suffered by a person who
is seen only on a balance sheet and not as physical
injury to person or property.
Death-
Death is an inevitable, universal process that
eventually occurs in all living organisms.
Severe and prolonged illness-
Severe means that you are not able to work at all,
or are not able to work on a regular basis and are
only able to earn a small amount.
22. Economic inflation-
Inflation is the decline of purchasing
power of a given currency over time. A
quantitative estimate of the rate at which
the decline in purchasing power occurs
can be reflected in the increase of an
average price level of a basket of
selected goods and services in an
economy over some period of time
23. Usual and Expected Crisis:
1.
• These problems arise daily in all families varying in time and
degree from family to family.
2.
• Among these some are beyond the control of the family members
for example war, deaths, accidents, illness, unemployment or
under employment. Each crisis involves corresponding changes in
the family. Poverty and sickness form a vicious partnership, each
helping the other to add to the miseries of mankind.
24. Crisis Arising From Family Conflict Situations.
• This type of crisis involves emancipation from over protection or
dependence upon families, feeling of being unwanted and rejected by
the parents and conflicts with the relatives and between brothers and
sisters, unwanted child in the family, illegal abortion or rejection after
birth, extra marital affairs, divorce and husband or wife nagging
irritating and complaining crisis.
Crisis Involves Social Stigma
• It includes alcoholics, jobless, delinquency, physical and mental
deterioration, premarital relationship, pregnancy of unmarried
daughter and presence of mentally deficient or physically
handicapped children in the family. Problems originate within the
family out of interpersonal relationship are known as intra-familial
and problems which are beyond the control of the individual family
due to economic depression or other calamities are known as extra-
familial crisis affect a number of families at the same time while the
intra-familial affects the members of a particular family.
25. Effect of Crisis:
Any crisis is blow to the family. All members are affected
collectively. It creates sorrow, anger or anguish for family
members and they play their role without enthusiasm.
Crisis has short and long-term effects upon the family.
Causes of Family Problems:
Inadequate interpersonal relationship, class membership
pressures, economic and other stresses, social disgrace are
the causes of family crisis and involves a threat to the
family organization to its form and structure.
26. Effects of Reorganization on Family Relationships
1. Parent-Child Relationships-
The primary effect of divorce (and of the parental conflict that
precedes the divorce) is a decline in the relationship between
parent and child. Immediately after a divorce, most parents have
two sets of problems: their adjustment to their own intra-
psychic conflicts and to their role as a divorced parent.
a. Support
b. Trust
c. Child's Early Departure from Home
2. Mother-Child Relationships
Children of divorced mothers have poorer and less stimulating
home environments. Furthermore, divorced mothers, despite
their best intentions, are less able than married mothers to give
emotional support to their children.
27. Father-Child Relationships
Divorced fathers, especially non-custodial fathers, do not fare
well with their children. Children from divorced families
receive less emotional support from their fathers than children
from intact families.
Sibling Relationships
Children of divorce are more likely to have hostile
relationships with their siblings than children from married
families.
Grandparent-Grandchild Relationships
Divorce negatively affects grandparent/grandchild
relationships. Paternal grandparents frequently cease to see
their grandchildren as their grandchildren’s contact with their
own father, the grandparents’ son, diminishes.