Perspectives on American kinship in the later 1990s

This paper reviews the current status of kinship research in the United States and identifies factors that might account for the declining interest in the subject among family researchers. The analysis uses both structural and cultural factors to illustrate how they can determine the diversity in kinship functioning that ranges from those family systems where kinship relationships flourish and those where they play a small part in family life. The structural and demographic variables determine the numbers and availability of kin, whereas the cultural variables determine the norms that establish the motivation to sustain kinship bonds. To illustrate how these factors operate among subgroups in the United States, I analyze three types of kinship systems: the lineal emphasis in White families of the very old; the collateral emphasis in the families of their Black counterparts; and the egocentric emphasis of White suburban families that are undergoing marital change.


  • Authors:Johnson, C.L.
  • Publication Year:2000
  • Citation:Johnson, C.L. (2000).Perspectives on American kinship in the later 1990s. Journal of Marriage and Family, 62,3, pp. 623-639.
  • Type:Articles in peer-reviewed academic journals
  • Abstract:English
  • Permanent Identifier:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00623.x
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