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African Families at the Turn of the 21st Century Baffour K. Takyi

African Families at the Turn of the 21st Century By Baffour K. Takyi

African Families at the Turn of the 21st Century by Baffour K. Takyi


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Summary

While it is true that the traditional family has changed in many ways and that African families are continuously confronted with new challenges, the renowned contributors to this volume recognize that the African family continues to adapt to emerging structural changes.

African Families at the Turn of the 21st Century Summary

African Families at the Turn of the 21st Century by Baffour K. Takyi

The institution of family has been central to the well-being of African societies over the years. African families have undergone significant transformation caused by the interplay of indigenous, Arabic/Islamic, and European/Christian cultures. The juxtaposition of these three cultures in the lives of African peoples captures the triple-heritage image of the continent. At the same time, modernization, urbanization, and migration have played and continue to play significant roles in the transformation of families across the continent. While it is true that the traditional family has changed in many ways and that African families are continuously confronted with new challenges, the renowned contributors to this volume recognize that the African family continues to adapt to emerging structural changes. In the new millennium, a host of issues and challenges has emerged, each with the potential to weaken or threaten the survival of the traditional African family. These include the HIV/AIDS pandemic; a growing elderly population; declining governmental support; and economic decay. How the post-colonial family reacts to these threats and challenges has the potential to either maintain or undermine the family's role as a major organizing principle in Africa.

The institution of family has been central to the well-being of African societies over the years. African families have undergone significant transformations caused by the interplay of indigenous, Arabic/Islamic, and European/Christian cultures. The juxtaposition of these three cultures in the lives of African peoples captures the triple-heritage image of the continent. At the same time, modernization, urbanization, and migration have played and continue to play a role in the transformation of families across the continent. While it is true that the traditional family has changed in many ways and that African families are continuously confronted with new challenges, the contributors to this volume recognize that the African family has adapted to the emerging structural changes. In the new millennium, a host of issues and challenges have the potential to weaken or threaten the survival of the traditional African family. These include the HIV/AIDS pandemic, which seems to afflict the young and able-bodied; a growing elderly population; declining governmental support; and economic decay. How the post-colonial family reacts to these threats and challenges has the potential to either maintain or undermine the family's role as a major organizing principle in Africa.

Profound transitions have occurred in family structure and processes since the post-colonial period. This work points to some of the documented transformations in African family life, including the changing modes of decision-making due to the establishment of a cash crop economy, nuptial patterns, changing maternal roles, an increasing age at marriage and declining fertility, a growing number of households headed by women, an increase in the rate of marital instability and dissolution, and changing patterns of mate selection and family relations.

African Families at the Turn of the 21st Century Reviews

"Geography, area studies, sociology, anthropology, and history are among the disciplines represented by contributors either from or in Africa, or specializing and having worked there. They provide a historical context for understanding the many types of families in the continent, and show how family systems have changed in country-specific contexts and the consequences of these changes. To counter the prevalence of studies on English-speaking countries, they include countries from North Africa and Francophone Africa." - Reference & Research Book News

About Baffour K. Takyi

Yaw Oheneba-Sakyi is Professor and Head of the Africana and American Indian Studies Program at California State University, Fresno. The author of Female Autonomy: Family Decision Making and Demographic Behavior in Africa, he has also published several articles in respectable journals.

Baffour K. Takyi is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Akron, Ohio. His varied research interests include reproductive related behavior, family dynamics, and African immigrants in the U.S. He has published extensively with some of his papers appearing in edited volumes on family and in journals such as Journal of Marriage and Family, Social Science and Medicine, Journal of Comparative Family, Journal of Family and Economic Issues, Sociological Focus, Family Perspectives, Sociology of Religion, African Journal of Reproductive Health, Ethnic and Racial Studies, and Western Journal of Black Studies.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction to the Study of African Families: A Framework of Analysis by Yaw Oheneba-Sakyi and Baffour K. Takyi Northern Africa Continuity or Change: Family Law and Family Structure in Tunisia by Mounira M. Charrad and Allyson B. Goeken Diversity and Family: The Example of Egyptian Families by Bahira Sherif-Trask The Sudanese Family: Past Reflections and Contemporary Realities by Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban Western Africa Senegalese Families: The Confluence of History, Ethnicity, and Social Change by Loretta Bass and Fatou Sow Structural Change and Continuity in the Ivoirian Familiy by N'Dri T. Assie-Lumumba Gender and the Family in Ghana: Past and Present Perspectives by Elizabeth Ardayfio-Schandorf The Nigerian Family: Contrast, Convergence, Continuity, and Discontinuity by Obioma Nnaemeka Central Africa Reflections on the Changing Family System in Cameroon by Chuks J. Mba and Martin W. Bangha Eastern Africa Kenyan Families by Miroslava Prazak Southern Africa Social Change, Family Dynamics and Women's Empowerment in Malawi by Agnes M. Chimbiri Family Life in South Africa: The Case of Soweto, Gauteng by Sylvia N. Moeno Conclusion African Families of the New Millennium: Concluding Remarks by Baffour K. Takyi and Yaw Oheneba-Sakyi Subject Index Appendices

Additional information

NPB9780275972745
9780275972745
0275972747
African Families at the Turn of the 21st Century by Baffour K. Takyi
New
Hardback
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
2006-03-01
318
N/A
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