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A Quiet Revolution?

As divorce rates rise and fewer couples bother with marriage, we ask if the traditional nuclear family is becoming a thing of the past.

While you are reading this article, somewhere in the United States two couples will get married and another will get divorced. One in three American children now lives with only one parent, and the United States is not alone in this: in Canada and France the divorce rate has doubled in the last twenty-five years, and in Hungary and Greece it has increased by 50 %. Even in Japan, where the traditional family is still strong, divorce went up by 15 % between 1980 and 1995.

What is more, the nature of the fatally is changing. In Sweden and Denmark, around half of all babies are now born to unmarried parents, and in the United Kingdom and France more than a third. Even in Ireland, traditionally the most Catholic country in Europe, the rate of birth outside marriage is 20 %.

Families are also getting smaller. The average Turkish family had seven members in 1970; today it has only five. And in Spain and Italy, where families were always traditionally large, the birthrate was the lowest in the developed world in 1995. This fall in the birthrate is due in part to the fact that, as more women have careers, they are waiting longer and longer to start a family. The age at which the average woman has her first baby is now 28 in Western Europe, and it is getting later.

So the nuclear family is clearly changing, but is it in danger of disappearing completely?

The truth is that it is still too early to tell. In some countries these patterns are actually reversing. In the United States, Scandinavia and the United Kingdom, the birth-rate is rising once more; and in Denmark for example, marriage is becoming more popular again. In the United States the divorce rate in fact fell by 10 % between 1980 and 1990, and it is continuing to fall.

Perhaps a new revolution is beginning?

XXIII. Read the article again. Which ONE of the following statements is NOT true according to the information in the main text?

a) Although there is not very much divorce in Japan, there is more than before.

b) Although Ireland is strongly Catholic, quite a lot of Irish people are now having children without getting married.

c) Although families in Spain and Italy were often big in the past, these days they are becoming smaller.

d) Although a lot of people in France have children without getting married, marriage is becoming more popular there again now.

e) Although there are a lot of divorces in the United States, there are not as many as there were fifteen or twenty years ago.

Review

I. Make up a dialogue about your family (relatives, their names, age, place of birth/residence, occupation, hobby, appearance, character).

II. Speak about your family. (Use the same plan as that in task I). You may use these sentences and expressions:

1. Before I start talking about my family let me introduce myself.

2. And now I’m going to tell you about my family.



3. To begin with…

4. To tell the truth…

5. And finally a few words about…

6. Put it into a few words…


Higher Education


Date: 2015-12-24; view: 2046


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