ABSTRACT

What are the future prospects of the modern family? For a long time the common image in the West has been to see the nuclear family, consisting of two economically independent spouses and their children, as the natural outcome of the modernization process. As the hierarchies of patriarchal society vanish, a social order based on equal and autonomous individuals all set for self-realisation has been assumed. However, high rates of divorce, often reported domestic violence, teenagers left on their own at an early age, do not harmonize very well with this idealized image. Critical analysis of family order in two countries at the opposite edges of the European continent - Turkey and Sweden - approaches these problems and attempts to create a more realistic picture of family life in the modern world.

chapter |15 pages

Contrasting Modernities

chapter |21 pages

Cross-cultural Perspectives on Family Change

ÇİĞDEM KAĞITÇIBAŞI

chapter |22 pages

The Strongest Bond on Trial

RITA LILJESTRÖM

chapter |19 pages

What the History of Family Counselling has to Say About Family Values

ANNA-KARIN KOLLIND

chapter |18 pages

The Household and Family in Turkey: An Historical Perspective

SHARON BAŞTUĞ

chapter |1 pages

Appendix

chapter |20 pages

The Family and the Welfare State: A Route to De-familialization

MARGARETA BÄCK-WIKLUND

chapter |21 pages

Equality—a Contested Concept

ULLA BJÖRNBERG AND ANNA-KARIN KOLLIND

chapter |21 pages

TORGEDUR EINARSDOTTIR Who Rules in the Core of the Family?

TORGERDUR EINARSDOTTIR

chapter |22 pages

Change and Continuity in the Turkish Middle Class Family

DIANE SUNAR

chapter |24 pages

Family Work in Working Class Households in Turkey

HALE BOLAK

chapter |1 pages

Political participation

chapter |2 pages

Parental allowances

chapter |5 pages

Index

chapter |2 pages

List of Participants