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  1. Abstract. To be in a family is to experience conflict: it is an unavoidable feature of family life. However, families vary tremendously in how they handle conflict. Episodes of conflict can be productive, helping to facilitate communication, or they can be damaging, destructive, and even dangerous.

  2. Mar 14, 2022 · Foundational family theoriesboth those derived from major sociological frameworks (e.g., conflict theory; Sprey, 1979) and those that were developed explicitly to understand the family as a unique type of group (e.g., family developmental theory; Hill & Rodgers, 1964 )—thus provide important ways to conceptualize and research something that hum...

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  4. Within families, conflict theorists highlight the role of power in family life and contend that the family is often not a haven, but rather an arena where power struggles occur. This exercise of power often entails the gender role performances described above.

  5. The traditional family pattern is thought to be the product of a particular (patri- archal, sexist, capitalist) society and thus is of limited relevance for the future. For organizational theory, on the other hand, the traditional family structure answers universal needs. Whereas conflict theory believes that the progress of.

  6. In the current article, we argue that greater insight, integration of knowledge, and empirical achievement in the study of family conflict can be realized by utilizing a powerful theory from evolutionary biology that is barely known within psychology: parent–offspring conflict theory (POCT).

  7. Paul, MN: West. Google Scholar. Farrington, K., & Foss, J. E. (1977). In search of the “missing” conceptual framework in family sociology: The social conflict framework. A paper presented at the Theory Development and Methods Workshop, annual meeting of the National Council on Family Relations. San Diego, California.

  8. This section will provide a brief overview of the conceptualization of family through the family communication patterns (FCP) theory, dyadic power theory, conflict, and family systems theory, with a special focus on the interparental relationship.

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