GENDER AND FINNISH CULTURE AND SOCIETY
Enviado por Ana_arenz • 21 de Agosto de 2018 • Ensayo • 9.928 Palabras (40 Páginas) • 468 Visitas
UNIVERSITY OF EASTERN FINLAND 2012/2013[pic 1]
GENDER AND FINNISH CULTURE AND SOCIETY
JAANA VUORI
GENDER STUDIES |
Spain and Finland: The evolution of the family (1950-2000). From the traditional family to the new models of families. |
UNIVERSITY OF LAS PALMAS ARENCIBIA NUEZ, ANA
UNIVERSITY OF ALCALA CAMPOS PEREZ, DAVID MARTIN
UNIVERSITY OF ALCALA GUTIERREZ OCAÑA, JULIA
UNIVERSITY OF LAS PALMAS MORALES MARTIN, ERASMO
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Contents:
- The emergence of the changes. The historical perspectives (page: 3)
- Family diversity and new types of family (page: 4)
- Family care: an analysis in Spaniard and Finnish societies (page: 18)
- Conclusion (page:30)
- Bibliography (page:30)
INTRODUCTION
Analyze the family as a sign of the social ideology and the changes in the society, comparing the different measures regarding to the general policy in Spain and in Finland.
The emergence of the changes. The historical perspectives:
The Spaniard society has suffered during the last twenty years the most radical structural change in the whole of European Union, according to the study published in 2004 by World Values Survey: Spain was the country with the deepest socials changes between the eighty nations analyzed (Fundación BBVA,17). The study shows the Spaniards as a tolerant and secular society which transformed so quickly the ways of thinking and their religious behaviors, sexual and family concepts. According to the specialist Menéndez Álvarez-Dardet the family plurality process occurred at par in the majorities countries of Europe, but in Spain these plurality process have been accepted and created faster than in the rest of the European average (Menéndez,1-2).
The putsch from the general Francisco Franco (who was in the power from 1939 until his death in 1975) became the Spanish nation in one dictatorship, called as National-Catholicism. During this time the families were conceived as the principal support of the new regimen, single and indivisibles, which was forbidden the divorce and the contraception.
In Spain, the called Transition (period started after the death of the dictator Francisco Franco) emerged the liberty wishes of the Spaniard. From 1960 to 1975 the new governments started to make laws which permitted to equate Spain to the rest of Europe. During this time were approved laws as the legal equality between genders, the divorce law and the legalization and developments in contraception, at par that was increasing the access to the woman to the labor market. All this laws changed abruptly the composition and the dynamic of the Spanish families (Menéndez, 1).
Although all the changes that the Spaniards families have suffered (ideological changes, economic transforms and division of functions), according to the specialist Menéndez Álvarez-Dardet “the Spanish families still currently too deep its roots in the past (...) the family is the principal institution for the members of them, the families are the principal support by the ties of loyalty and obligation that unite its members” (Menéndez, 17).
With the Spanish Constitution of 1978 changed the concept of the family: the freedom and equality between members of the family. It’s passed from the marriage based in the authority of the husband and the dependence of his wife to him to one marriage based in the equality of rights between the couple. This change caused a big transformation in the families relations and supposed a transcendental change in the women’ life. Also, the Spanish Constitution of 1978 finished with the discrimination to the children from parents not married (called, before this new law, as illegitimate children) which facilitated new types of conviviality and more plurality in the household.
After the dictator death, the economic changes that more have influenced in the transition of the families are the increasing of the educational level of the news generations and the access to the women to the labor market. Man and women are delaying their marriage and the birth- child, due to their studies, their news expectative of future and the difficulty for make compatible the family care (Fundación BBVA, 18).
Finland, like Spain, presents the same cases respect the marriage and the first childbirth. In Finland, in the beginning of 2000s the value of child allowance in real terms had dropped below the level in the early 1990s. Reason which the government increased the family benefits in the beginning of 2004 (Ministry of social affairs and health, 5). Due to these policies Finland currently presents high fertility rates, because of higher social spending in families, the assistance from public institutions and the existence of flexible or part-time contracts (Gómez, 1).
Family diversity and new types of families:
In every society family diversity and the perception of it differs. Family according to the Multilingual Demographic Dictionary of the United Nations (census perception), “generally consists of all members of a household who are related through blood, adoption or marriage”, understanding household as, “a socio-economic unit, consists of individuals who live together”.
On the other hand, a more opened definition, maybe because of its sociological perspective, proposed by the Vanier Institute of the Family of Canada defines Family as:
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