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  1. Families of choice in the LGBT community can include “lovers, ex-lovers, friends, co-parents, gamete-donors, and children brought into the family through adoption, foster care, prior heterosexual relationships, and alternative reproduction.”[30] Families of choice provide emotional support, economic cooperation, and socialization.[31]

  2. May 14, 2020 · The family practices framework roots our understanding of wha t family is in everyday expectations. and behaviours, and thereby connects the abstract concep t to the way it is used by social ...

  3. Family of choice in the LGBT community LGBT people in particular often seek out families of their choice when social support is required due to exclusion from their family of origin. Kath Weston pointed out in 1991 that LGBT people almost always run the risk of being disowned by coming out to their families about their ancestry.

  4. May 18, 2022 · The definition of the family developed by Ernest W. Burgess was the first widely used definition by academics. 1 The term “family” was described as “two or more persons joined by ties of marriage, blood, or adoption; constituting a single household; interacting and communicating with each other in their respective social roles of husband ...

  5. Apr 9, 2024 · Your family of origin also influences how you interact with others and develop or instigate relationships. The way your parents (or grandparents, or other parental figures) treat each other and you are pivotal in helping you develop your ideas regarding relationships, marriage, partnership, and family. If your parental figures are callous or ...

  6. Jan 13, 2020 · The extended family of choice. Whereas in the late 1990s the notion of choice in the context of family referred to self-defined families of LGBTs who are not biologically related (Donovan, Heaphy, and Weeks Citation 2003), posthumous grandparenthood creates a unique blend of choice and biological kinship. In many cultures throughout history ...

  7. Mar 27, 2017 · 1. In this text we will use the terms families of choice or same-sex families interchangeably. Our use of the category of families of choice is strongly inspired by Kath Weston. Therefore, by this term we mean families created by non-heterosexual persons, with or without children.

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