You are on page 1of 10

Course Code: SOC102 Course Title: Social Institutions

Submitted To: Dr. Karam Sapana Devi Submitted By: Pankaj Mahanta

Student’s Roll no: RQ2020A02 Student’s Reg. no: 12001141

Academic Task No.: 01 Academic Task Title: Online Assignment

Subject Section: QE412 Home Section: Q2020

Evaluation Parameters:

Learning Outcomes: (This academic task was very sufficient for me because it helped me out to
know about the conceptual understanding of all the topics from the course those are covered so far.)

Declaration: I declare that this Assignment is my work. I have not copied it from any other student’s
work or any other source except where due acknowledgment is made explicitly in the text, nor has
any part been written for me by any other person.

Student’s Signature: Pankaj Mahanta


Evaluator’s comments (For Instructor’s use only) Evaluator’s Signature and Date:
General Suggestions for Best part of the
Observations Improvement assignment

Marks Obtained: _______________ Max. Marks: __30_______


Social Institutions “The Family”

Contents
 INTRODUCTION
 KINDSHIP PATTERNS
 TYPES OF FAMILY
 FUNCTIONS OF FAMILY INSTITUTION
 MARRIAGE AS A SOCIAL INSTITUTION
 FUNCTIONS OF MARRIAGE
 CONCLUSION
 INTRODUCTION
o The family is generally regarded as a primary social institution.
o The institution of family is a basic unit in the society, and the multifaceted
functions performed by it makes it a much-needed institution in a society.
o It is one of the oldest social institution on the earth. Although families differ
widely around the world, they also share certain common concerns in their
everyday lives.

DEFINITION
o The family is a kindship group that consists of two or more people who
consider themselves related by blood, marriage, or adoption.
o A family is a group of persons directly linked by kin connections, the adult
members of whom assume responsibility for caring for children.
o The family is a kinship based cooperative unit.

 KINDSHIP PATTERNS:
o Kinship is a social bond based on common ancestry, marriage, or adoption.
o It is the state of being related to others.

DEFINITION
o The family is a group of persons united by ties of marriage, blood or adoption
constituting a simple household interacting and intercommunication with each
other in their respective social roles of husband and wife, father and mother,
son and daughter, brother and sister creating a common culture. 5 Families of
Orientation and Procreation
o During our lifetime, many of us will be members of two different types of
families:
o The family of orientation is the family into which a person is born and in
which early socialization usually takes place
o The family of procreation is the family that a person forms by having or
adopting children.

 TYPES OF FAMILY
Types of family
A. Based on size and structure family are three types:

1. Nuclear Family
2. Joint Family
3. Extended Family
Nuclear Family consists of a mother, father, and their biological or adoptive
descendants.

Joint Family The social unit consisting of several generations of kindred living
together under the same roof or in a joining compound.

Extended Family An extended family is two or more adults from different


generations of a family, who share a household. It consists of more than parents and
children

B. Based On Blood Relations.

By Size and Structure:


o A nuclear family is a family composed of one or two parents and their
dependent children, all of whom live apart from other relatives.
o An extended family is a family unit composed of relatives in addition to
parents and children who live in the same household.

By Marriage:
o Endogamy -- marriage between people of the same social category
o Exogamy -- marriage between people of different social groups.

By Polygamy – A marriage uniting three or more people.


o There are two types of polygamy:
 Polygyny, in which a man may be married to more than one woman at
the same time.
 Polyandry, much less common, in which a woman may have two or
more husbands simultaneously.

By Residential Patterns
o Patrilocal -- married couple live with their husbands family
o Matrilocal --married couple live with their wife’s family
o Neolocal -- married couple lives apart from both spouses families.

By Power and Authority


o A patriarchal family is a family structure in which authority is held by the
eldest male (usually the father).
o A matriarchal family is a family structure in which authority is held by the
eldest female (usually the mother).
o Blended family: spouses and their children from former marriages live as a
single nuclear family.
o Stem family: only one child after marriage continues to live with his parents.
His siblings must leave after they marry.
 FUNCTIONS OF FAMILY INSTITUTION:

 Sexual Regulation: Families regulate the sexual activity of their members and thus
control reproduction so that it occurs within specific boundaries.
o Marriage is a legally recognized relationship, established by a civil or religious
ceremony, between two people who intend to live together as partners.
o There is no society which leaves people to express their sexual behaviours as
they want, but there are a whole set of written and unwritten rules/norms that
prohibit certain ways of sexual behaviour.

 Reproduction: In order to develop, each society needs new generations of young


people to replace the old people and this can be merely in three ways: by reproduction,
migration or conquest of other societies.
o However, in the absence of biological reproduction, any society is sentenced
to disappearance.
o This essential function is also performed by the family.

 Socialization: Family is responsible for primary care and early learning


o It is not just a producer of biological kind, but has a fundamental role of
socializing the children (language, learning a set of values, beliefs, skills, etc)
o Parents and other relatives are responsible for teaching children the necessary
knowledge and skills to survive.

 Economic Support: Families are the basic unit of economic support. Financial
support is provided to the dependent members of the families.
o Assigning assets
o Important economic production and consumption unit
o Providing Care and Protection: every human being needs food and shelter. In
addition, we all need to be among people who care for us emotionally , who
help us with the problems that arise in daily life, and who back us up when we
come into conflict with others. Undoubtedly, the family often is the one group
in society that meets these needs.

 Providing social status/ Social Placement: Simply by being born into a family, each
individual receives both material goods and a socially recognized position defined by
ascribed statuses.
o These statuses include social class, caste membership and ethnic identity.
o Our family background is the most important social factor affecting our lives
in society.
o Education: Family provides formal and informal education to its members,
so that they become useful members of the society.
o Recreation: Family provides recreational activities within the family and
outside the family to its participating members.

 MARRIAGE AS A SOCIAL INSTITUTION

o Marriage is a socially recognized institution which is found in every society.


o Wedding ceremonies are held for the tie of marriage.
o It is basically the acceptance of new status with a new set of obligations
recognized by the people who are entering through a legal contract.
o It leads to the formation of the family and the procreation of children

DEFINITION
o According to Encyclopedia Britannica, “Marriage is a physical, legal and
moral union between man and woman in complete community life for the
establishment of a family.”
o According to Malinowski, “Marriage is a contract for the production and
maintenance of children.”
o Marriage is the approved social pattern whereby two or more persons establish
a family.
o Marriage is a legally recognized social contract with stable relationship in
which a man and a woman are socially permitted without loss of standing in
community to have children.

CHARACTERISTICS
o Marriage is a universal social institution.
o Marriage is a relatively permanent bond between husband and wife. It is
designed to fulfill the social, psychological, biological and religious aims.
o Marriage establishes family.
o Marriage requires social approval. The relationship between men and women
must have social approval. Without which marriage is not valid. Therefore,it is
always associated with some civil and religious ceremony. This social and
religious ceremony provides validity to marriage.
o Marriage has certain symbols like ring, special cloths, etc.

TYPES OF MARRIAGE
o Monogamy is an ideal, widespread and rational type of marriage. Monogamy
refers to a marriage of one man with one woman at a time.
o Polygamy is a type of marriage in which there is plurality of partners. It
allows a man to marry more than one woman or a woman to marry more than
one man at a time.
* Polygyny, in which a man may be married to more than one woman
at the same time. While the majority of societies accept polygyny, the
majority of people do not practice it.
* Polyandry, much less common, in which a woman may have two or
more husbands simultaneously.

Marriage may be divided into two types i.e. endogamous and exogamous marriages
on the basis of choice of mate or on the basis of the rules of choice of mate
o Endogamy -- marriage between people of the same social category
o Exogamy -- marriage between people of different social groups.

Levirate: When a woman marries her husband’s brother after the death of her
husband it is known as levirate.
Sororate: When a man marries his wife’s sister after the death of his wife or even
when the wife is alive it is called as sororate.

FUNCTIONS OF MARRIAGE
o Regulates Sexual relation
Marriage regulates the sexual behaviour of man and woman and helps them to
reduce sexual competition.
It is the medium under which man and woman have intercourse in socially
approved manner.
o Continuation of progeny
The progeny of human being is continued due to marriage as it is a legitimate
way to produce children.

o Upbringing and protection of offspring


Marriage brings man and woman together to nurture, protect and ensure that
their offspring survives.
It provides family as a social institution to its children where they gets
physical, psychological and social training to prepare them to live in and for
the society.
This provides knowledge children about their gender roles and other social
and cultural norms.
o Provides Economic security and fulfils needs
Marriage creates a discipline and provides framework to humans under which
they provide the basic needs of their partners eg. Food, shelter, clothing and
safety.
In Indian society marriage provides economic security to women as men are
the bread earner and women depends on the earnings of the man.
Conclusion
Social institutions affect social life in many ways. Without them we would be unable to enjoy
most of the benefits that we gain from acting in concert with others. They structure social life
so as to produce collective benefits, variously characterized as gains from cooperation,
coordination, and trade; functional and systemic needs; and so on.

Social institutions influence an individual's development as well as life in general when it


comes to society and socializing. The three most important social institutions are family,
religion, and education. Education is the most important because it gives you knowledge,
skills, and values.
References
https://www.sociologyguide.com/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociology
Thank You

You might also like