A family is a living entity, holding together in a dynamic relationship
members of different ages and generations.
As individuals move along their particular life-path coming of age, marriage,
parenthood, maturity, growing dependence and ultimately death they alter also the
chemistry of the family that contains them. For the family these milestones can bring
tension, even crisis, and always the need for adaptation; but also renewal and
regeneration.
A passed-down understanding and awareness of the significance of these milestones and
the corresponding needs of the various members and of the unit as a whole underpinned
societies over the ages. A similar understanding is now required also of the policy makers
and the practitioners who have the social responsibility for ensuring the support that may
be needed from outside the family at such times as a union (family formation); the
addition of new members (birth, adoption of children); separation (young/adult children
leaving the home, illness or incapacity); marriage dissolution or death of a family
member.
Policies need to be geared both to the individuals need of particular ages as
well as his or her family circumstances. Dependent young children require considerable
parental time. The loss of one spouses income represents a severe burden for most
families. But the loss of income is dramatically different at each stage of family
development. For families with infants, the loss might mean reliance on day care and less
parental attention from the surviving parent (when she/he exists). For families with
adolescent children, it might mean restriction in teenage recreation and the necessity for
after school work to help the family.
The family stages present challenges that can be further exacerbated by factors like
poverty, armed conflicts and certain cultural mores that rigidly define and govern when
and how certain life events should take place as well as the roles, rights and
responsibilities of each family member. Age of unions/marriage; right to child custody
upon the separation of the parents/legal guardians; rights and responsibilities of a
widowed woman, etc. are examples of situations/transitions within the life course of
families often defined by cultural mores and local policies.
Families for all ages can thus be interpreted in two broad ways that are complementary.
On the one hand, the responsibility of families to nurture, care and provide support to
all of their members appropriate to their ages; on the other, the need of families for
assistance, support and protection to perform their functions during the different phases
of their life cycles.
These approaches encourage greater attention to the needs of individual members of the
family based on their individual needs, and an understanding of families as systems. They
can assist policy makers in the development and implementation of more concerted actions.
Family and individual support are then provided within the context of the life course of
both the individual and the family.
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Families
for All Ages: The Developmental Stages of Their Individual Members Challenges and
Opportunities
Children
Families play a strategic role in the survival, development and protection of children,
notably with respect to socialization, education and the intergenerational transmission of
culture and values. Parents and families, like schools and day-care centers, have the
opportunity to mould younger generations.
The effects of poverty on the socialization and education of children can be
devastating. Adequate and affordable child-care services and family supportive work
environments are central in supplementing and facilitating the full development of
children and parent-child relationships. Integrated programmes in early childhood care and
development can provide a sound foundation for life-long learning. This encompasses a
range of community-based services to young children from birth to 8 years of age and also
to their families.
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Young Adults
Young family members can, and often play a pivotal role in socialization within the
family. They can have a positive impact on their parent's personalities. Parents can
receive from their children information on many issues with which they normally do not
deal with. Young people bring into the family fresh ideas and propagate social, cultural
and political changes emanating from schools and colleges. For example, immigrant refugee
parents often learn from their children the language and customs of the new country. Young
people also make significant contributions to sharing household tasks, including income
generation through their participation in the labour force and caring for other family
members.
Enabling youth to make responsible choices, ensuring their safety and health, and
overcoming discrimination are therefore critical. Families are central to this, and the
necessary skills and support must be made available to them.
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Young Families
Families headed by young people need special attention. Young people benefit from
schooling by acquiring skills that facilitate their incorporation into the labour market
and practical knowledge that they can apply in all areas of their lives like decisions of
family formation and reproductive choices. These affect their development and options of
live, as well as influence the ability of the young parents to provide, care and nurture
their children. Relationship and parenting skills and opportunities for young parents to
continue their education and incorporation into the labour market, are components of an
enabling environment that supports and strengthens these young families.
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Older Persons
In the traditional extended family, older persons enjoy high prestige as custodians of
village lore and morality, and as persons standing nearest to departed ancestors. As long
as they are physically able, they also contribute to productive work in farming and in the
household. Within the extended family, they enjoy a sense of belonging, as well as
emotional and physical security. Overall, many older persons rely on the support they
receive from their families.
Research shows that the extended family continues to play its traditional role, though
often at a distance, with good relationships maintained between ageing persons and their
adult children. Even in the most developed countries, the family continues to be an
important provider of care and supportive services to older persons, especially through
daughters and daughters-in-law.
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The
Influence of Demographic Changes on the Family
At the same time, given the concurrent phenomena of decreasing family size and
increasing numbers of older persons, as well as other demographic and social factors
affecting family structure, formal institutions have arisen to share or take over some of
the traditional responsibilities of families.
Many social policies relating to older persons still need to be improved. A current
policy issue is thus to find a proper balance between the family and government
assistance: to help the family continue to be responsive to the needs of its older members
and yet to provide outside care when critically required. Clearly, social policy must take
into consideration not only the needs of the older persons but the links between the
generations.
The falling birth rate and the resulting decrease in the number of children available
in a family to care for ageing parents is also affecting the capacity of the family to
continue its care-giving role. A second factor taxing the resources of families as care
providers is the increase in the numbers of the very old, who may require intensive
nursing and other support. While family members may wish to continue care for very old
relatives, they will, in most cases, lack the skill and physical capacity to provide
continuous nursing supervision. Linked to the growing prevalence of the very old is the
increasing probability of families encompassing four or five generations. It becomes
exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, for a middle-aged person to care for two
generations of elderly relatives, in addition to carrying out the roles of parent and
grandparent.
The preponderance of widowed women among the old is another factor affecting the
availability of family support. The tendency of men to marry women several years younger
than themselves and the longer life expectancy of women in many areas implies that older
women have a high probability of experiencing a long period of widowhood in later life.
The loss of a spouse means loss of socio-economic support and companionship, and makes
older women vulnerable to poverty and social isolation when support systems and protective
legislation do not exist.
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Family-oriented
policies: An Enabling Environment for Families for All Ages
The global conferences of the 1990s sponsored by the United Nations recognized
and acknowledged the need for policies that support the family, whatever its form.
Governments have the responsibility to strengthen the role of the family by formulating
appropriate family-friendly policies and programmes and providing an environment conducive
to the strengthening of the family.
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