Family—Features

Family—Features

The family is an organization par excellence. Of all social organizations, large or small, the family is of the greatest sociological significance. It occupies the central position in our social structure, and unlike other institutions, it enjoys a unique position in society.

Maclver has elaborated on the distinctive features of family as follows-

1. Universality: 

Family is the most basic universal social unit. It is found worldwide and in every type of culture, and there is no substitute for it. Civilizations rise and collapse, but the family lives forever. Therefore, the family is a universal group.

2. Emotional basis: 

A family integrates all the family members into a coherent unit based on emotional closeness. Affection towards each other, mutual co-operation and blood ties are the integrative bonds of the family. This emotional bond ensures early education, cultural transmission, and mutual trust. Thus, the family becomes a true shelter for the people in this hostile and competitive world

3. Limited Size: 

The family is tiny in size. It is known as the smallest primary group. It is a small social institution. It includes husband and wife and the persons who are born in it or are adopted. The relations among the members of the family are direct, intimate, close, personal, and permanent. This is possible only due to the small size of the family. Further, the smallness of the family brings stability to the family.

4. Nuclear position in social structures: 

The family is the nucleus of all other social organizations. The whole social structure is built of family units. It influences the whole life of society. The newly born child has to be taught and disciplined properly, and only then can he be adjusted to the wider world. This purpose is served only by the family.

5. Responsibility of the Members: 

The family members have a deep sense of responsibility and obligation. Due to this sense of responsibility, the entire family discharges its duties. All the members of the family have joint responsibility. In the family, the children learn about responsibility and cooperation.

6. Formative influence: 

The family is the earliest social environment that surrounds, trains, and educates the child. It shapes the personality and moulds the character of its members.

7. Social regulation: 

Social regulations maintain family unity and adjust to the family and society as much as possible. The restrictions enable the members to behave in a socially useful manner, and the family is believed to be a strong basis on which society’s fabric is dependent to a great extent. For example, there are social restrictions on divorce in almost every society.

8. Persistence and Change: 

The family may be permanent or transitional by nature. As an institution, it is permanent. When a couple settles in an independent residence after marriage, the family continues to exist with other members. Hence, the family is permanent as an institution. Family, on the other hand, is temporary and transitional because the structure of the family changes over time in terms of size, composition, and status of persons.

Sometimes, we find two brothers of the same family living separately with their wives and children. Still, they are bound by many relationships, thereby giving a new dimension to the composition and nature of family in modern times.

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