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FAMILY LAW II

TYPES OF FAMILY
ON THE BASIS ON BIRTH
• Family of Orientation:
The family in which an individual is born is his family of orientation.
• Family of Procreation:
The family where an individual sets up after his/her marriage is his/her family
of procreation.
The family of orientation and procreation may live together under the same
roof, but can still be distinguished.
ON THE BASIS OF AUTHORITY
• The family may be either patriarchal or matriarchal on the basis of authority.
• (i) Patriarchal Family: Patriarchal family is a type of family in which all authority belongs to
the paternal side. In this family, the eldest male or the father is the head of the family. He
exercises his authority over the members of the family. He presides over the religious rites of
the household; he is the guardian of the family goods. In the developed patriarchal system of
the past, the patriarch had unlimited and undisputed authority over his wife, sons and
daughters.
• (ii) Matriarchal Family: It is a form of family in which authority is centered in the wife or
mother. The matriarchal family system implies rule of the family by the mother, not by the
father. In this type of family women are entitled to perform religious rites and husband lives in
the house of wife.
ON THE BASIS OF MARRIAGE
• Monogamous Family: This family consists of one husband and wife, including
children and is based on monogamous marriages.
• Polygynous Family: A family consisting of one husband, and more than one
wife, and all the children born to all the wives or adopted by each of them.
This type of family has its basis in the polygynous form of marriage.
• Polyandrous Family: A family made up of one wife and more than one
husband, and the children, either born or adopted with each one of them. This
family is based on polyandrous marriage.
ON THE BASIS OF RESIDENCE
• (i) Patrilocal Family: When the wife goes to live with the husband’s family, it
is called the patrilocal family.
• (ii) Matrilocal Family: When the couple after marriage moves to live with the
wife’s family, such residence is called matrilocal. The husband has a secondary
position in the wife’s family where his children live.
• (iii) Neolocal Residence: When the couple after marriage moves to settle in
an independent residence which is neither attached to the bride’s family of
origin nor bridegroom’s family of origin it is called neolocal residence.
ON THE BASIS OF RESIDENCE

• iv) Avunculocal Family: In this type of family the married couple moves to
the house of the maternal uncle and live with his son after marriage.
Avonculocal family is found among the Nayars of Kerala.
• (v) Matri-Patri Local Family: In matri-patrilocal family, immediately after
marriage the bridegroom moves to the house of the bride and temporarily
settles there till the birth of the first child and then comes back to his family of
orientation, along with wife and child for permanent settlement. The
Chenchuas of Andhra Pradesh live in this type of family.
ON THE BASIS OF DESCENT
• (i) Patrilineal Family: When descent is traced through the father, it is called
patrilineal family. In this type of family inheritance of property takes place along the
male line of descent. The ancestry of such family is determined on the basis of male
line or the father. A patrilineal family is also patriarchal and patrilocal. This is the
common type of family prevalent today.
• (ii) Matrilineal Family: In this type of family descent is traced along the female line
and inheritance of property also takes place along the female line of descent. The
Vedas, the North American Indians, some people of Malabar and the Khasi tribe are
matrilineal. Generally, the matrilineal families are matriarchal and matrilocal.
ON THE BASIS OF MARRIAGE
• (i) Monogamous Family: A monogamous family is one which is consisted of
one husband and one wife. In this type of family one man has one wife or one
woman has one husband at a given time. Hence a husband and a wife living
together, constitute a monogamous family. It is an ideal form of family
prevalent widely.
• (ii) Polygamous Family: When one man marries several woman or one
woman marries several men and constitute the family, it is polygamous family.
Again polygamous family is divided into two types such as polygynous family
and polyandrous family.
ON THE BASIS OF IN-GROUP AND OUT-GROUP
AFFILIATION.
• (i) Endogamous Family: Endogamy is the practice of marrying someone within a group to
which one belongs. An endogamous family is one which consists of husband and wife who
belong to same group such as caste or tribe. For example, in a caste-ridden society like India
a member of a particular caste has to marry within his own caste. When a person marries
within his caste group, it is called endogamous family.
• (ii) Exogamous Family: Endogamy means marriage within a group, while exogamy means
marriage with someone outside his group. For example a Hindu must marry outside his Kinship
group or gotra. When a family is consisted of husband and wife of different groups such as
gotra is called exogamous family. In India marriage between same gotra has been
prohibited. Hence, one must marry outside his own gotra. Similarly some tribes follow the
practice of clan exogamy. Accordingly, they marry outside their group (clan). The practice of
clan exogamy is widely followed among the Indian tribes like the Gond, the Ho, the Khasi etc.
ON THE BASIS OF BLOOD-RELATIONSHIP
• (i) Consanguine Family: The consanguine family is built upon the parent-child relationship (on
blood-descent). The family is a descent group through the male line which is firmly vested with
authority. The consanguine family comprises a nucleus of blood relatives surrounded by a fringe of
wives and others who are incidental to the maintenance of the family unit. Such families can
become very large. The Nayar family is a typical example.
• (ii) Conjugal Family: The conjugal family is a nucleus of the husband, the wife and their offspring,
who are surrounded by a fringe of relatives only incidental to the functioning of the family as a
unit. In this type family, the authority and solidarity of the family group reside solely in the
conjugal (husband and wife) pair. In contrast to consanguine type of family, the conjugal family is
much more isolated from wider kinship relationships. The consanguine family, which is typical of an
agricultural society, is large, stable, secure, self sufficient and authoritarian. On the other hand the
conjugal family, typical of a modern society, is small, transient, isolated and relatively insecure but
democratic.
ON THE BASIS OF SIZE OR STRUCTURE
• Nuclear Family: A nuclear family is a small group consisting of a husband, a wife and
children, natural or adopted. It is more or less an autonomous unit that is not under the control
of adults or elders of the family. It consists of two generations only. In all modern societies,
nuclear family is the most common type of family. In fact, nuclear family is both the
consequence as well as the cause of the disintegration of joint family.
• Joint Family: A joint family consists of three generation, living together under the same roof,
sharing the same kitchen and purse or economic expenses. It is a family consisting of three
nuclear families living together. According to Iravati Karve, a joint family is ‘a group of
people, who generally live under the same roof, who eat food cooked at one hearth, who
hold property in common, and who participate in common family worship and are related to
each other as some particular type of kindered.’
ON THE BASIS OF SIZE OR NUMBER
• 1. Nuclear Family
• 2. Joint Family

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