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Families in Context: A World History of Population

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Families in Context: A World History of Population

Contributors:
ISBN:

9780313278303

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

30th June 1992

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Sociology: family and relationships
Social groups, communities and identities

Dewey:

304.609

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

480

Description

Continuing a series of explorations of aspects of family life begun in "A History of Marriage Systems" (GP, 1988), G. Robina Quale provides a comprehensive overview of the basic forms of interaction between the family and the societal macrocosm, as both interact with disease, available resources, and current technologies. Since the beginning of human society, Quale says, forager bands and, later, family households have striven to meet the group's basic needs by maintaining a ratio of 3 active members to 2 members who need care because of immaturity, a handicap, or frailty. The book describes the way in which households have tried to reach the favourable 3:2 ratio in different areas and periods of history, factoring in the technological and environmental constraints and health hazards inherent in those areas and periods. The broad periods considered include forager and pre-urban argicultural life, the period of regional cities and peasantry from about 3500 BC to AD 1500, and, since 1500, the age of world cities. Quale describes how in recent times economic diversification, fertility reduction, education, social welfare services, and pension plans have joined bilaterality, equally divided inheritance, nuclear households, mid-twenties marriage, and partner self-selection in modern life in Europe and its overseas offshoots. These patterns are being adapted by other societies as they also diversify economically. Yet economic diversification, with all its benefits, also presents problems such as the overuse of environmental resources and the incidence of pollution-caused disease. This volume should prove of interest to those concerned with family studies and family history, global environmental history, and the history of disease.

Author Bio

G. ROBINA QUALE is Professor of History at Albion College. She is the author of A History of Marriage Systems (Greenwood Press, 1988) and Eastern Civilizations (1966 d ed. 1975).

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