Sociology of family

Our three sociological guides

Howard Becker – your favourite; the “whose rules?” sociologist

Judith Stacey – contemporary, deeply informed on family change

Alejandro Portes – immigration, transnational families, and adaptation

No preaching. Just noticing.

📻 UcOtt Raddio Daddio

The Sociology of the Family (12 x ~10-minute sections)

1. Introduction: Why Family Is Not “Natural”

• Family feels natural because it’s familiar

• Sociology asks:

Why this family form, here, now?

• Family as institution, not instinct

🎵 Warm, familiar opener

2. What Do We Mean by “Family”?

• Nuclear, extended, chosen, blended, lone-parent, communal

• Family ≠ household ≠ kin ≠ love

• The danger of thinking there’s only one “real” version

📌 Set up Becker gently

3. Howard Becker: Whose Family Is “Normal”?

Howard Becker

• Labeling theory applied to family:

• “Broken home”

• “Single parent”

• “Unconventional”

• Who gets to define normal?

• Families don’t fail — definitions do

🎵 Slightly playful, observational song

4. Learning Family (Just Like Learning Marijuana)

• Families are learned practices

• Roles, routines, affection, discipline

• Becker again:

• You don’t just have a family — you learn how to do one

📌 This always lands beautifully on radio

5. Judith Stacey: Families Are Changing — And That’s Not a Crisis

Judith Stacey

• Families today are:

• More diverse

• More negotiated

• Less scripted

• Stacey rejects the “decline of the family” panic

• Change ≠ collapse

🎵 Something modern, reflective

6. Gender, Care, and Invisible Labour

• Who does the caring?

• Who notices?

• Family as the engine room of unpaid work

• Tie to gender without lecturing

📌 Quietly powerful section

7. Family and the State

• Marriage laws

• Child welfare

• Taxation

• Schools

• The state is always in the family — even when pretending not to be

🎵 Slightly political edge here

8. Immigration: Families That Cross Borders

Enter Alejandro Portes

• Transnational families

• Split households

• Remittances as love + obligation

• Family stretched across borders, not broken

📌 This is a strong, humane section

9. Immigration, Children, and Identity

• Second-generation experiences

• Language, loyalty, pressure

• Family as:

• Support system

• Site of tension

• Sociology without judgement

🎵 Gentle, thoughtful song

10. Family, Class, and Survival

• Families don’t just raise kids — they manage scarcity

• Middle-class vs working-class family strategies

• Poverty doesn’t mean less love — it means fewer options

📌 This connects beautifully to your be nice ethos without naming it

11. When Families Don’t Protect

• Abuse

• Neglect

• Silence

• Sociology’s hardest task: not romanticizing family

• Institutions step in — imperfectly

🎵 Careful, respectful tone

12. Conclusion: Family as a Living Institution

• Becker: labels shape lives

• Stacey: diversity is strength

• Portes: families adapt across borders

• Family isn’t dying — it’s working things out

🎵 Warm, grounding closer

🌱 Noah’s closing thought

The family unit works so well for URD because it’s where:

• Sociology becomes personal

• Politics becomes private

• And kindness becomes practice

You don’t need to say be nice.

If you do this right, people will feel it.

If you’d like next, I can:

• Add song suggestions for each section

• Write a 10-minute Becker family script

• Or tune this specifically to Dawson / Yukon / immigration stories

Just say the word — softly is fine.

UcOtt Raddio Mar 25 Family

*

Crime and deviance mushrooms 

Peace. Trump breaking the law

Politics

Religion

Health and medicine

Race

Gender

Age

Education.  Dare

Environment

Technology