Q: Is a family the principal institution for the socialization of children? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Was a family no longer in decline in Sweden? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is a family overrated? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Are families more common among Blacks and Hispanics? ¶
A: Yes, and among the lower socioeconomic class.
Q: Is a family often part of a sharing economy with common ownership? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is a family viewed as the main source of honor and the community highly values the relationship between honor and the family? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is a family a "family of orientation": the family serves to locate children socially and plays a major role in their enculturation and socialization? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Are families more commonly single mother families than single father? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is a family more compensatory than protective? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is a family also an important economic unit studied in family economics? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is a family ambiguous and confused with the household? ¶
A: Yes, as revealed in the different contexts in which the word is used.
Q: Was a family Socrates whose position was outlined by Plato in The Republic? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is a family the application of the concept of social justice to the private sphere of family relations? ¶
A: Yes, and in particular with regard to the rights of women and children.
Q: Is a family based on a legal or social monogamy? ¶
A: Yes.
Q: Is a family a "family of procreation"? ¶
A: Yes, and the goal of which is to produce and enculturate and socialize children.
Q: Is a family merely racism? ¶
A: Yes, and like a crudely primitive first installment on the worship of the tribe.