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  2. May 18, 2021 · Definition. Kinship networks can be defined as a group of interconnected social relationships among people who are considered to be “kin,” or family, which may be established through biology, adoption, marriage, partnership, or other close social relationships (Lukacs 2011 ).

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  3. The study of kinship is central to anthropology. It provides deep insights into human relationships and alliances, including those who can and cannot marry, mechanisms that are used to create families, and even the ways social and economic resources are dispersed within a group.

  4. Kinship is also a sociocultural construction, one that creates a network of social and biological relationships between individuals. Through kinship systems, humans create meaning by interpreting social and biological relationships.

  5. Apr 19, 2018 · kinship network. Updated on 04/19/2018. the system of formal and informal relationships that make up an extended family in a given culture or society, typically based on blood ties, marriage, or adoption. The analysis of kinship networks and descent groups in preindustrial societies has been a major concern of cultural anthropology.

  6. 20. Variations in Kinship Networks. zation, with fewer obligations to wider kin, developed as a response to the needs of modern industrial society for a socially and geographically mobile labor force (Parsons 1956). Adams (1970, p. 575) referred to the implicit as.

  7. May 11, 2018 · Kinship systems are found to vary in different societies with respect to a number of characteristics: (1) the extent to which genealogical and affinal relationships are recognized for social purposes; (2) the ways in which relatives so recognized are classified or grouped in social categories; (3) the particular customs by which the behavior of ...

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