Sociology, asked by sarojitkapasi, 10 months ago

what are the difference between joint family and extended family??

Answers

Answered by ritika200119
5
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Here is your answer

In an extended family ,parents and their children's families may often live under a single roof. This is type of joint family open and includes multiple generation in the family. From culture to culture, the variance of the term may have different meanings in the joint family, the workload is shared among the members.
Answered by smartbrainz
0

A family when lives together with all family members up to 2nd generation such as grandparents, parents, uncles, aunts and their children is called a joint family. Extended family comprises almost ever blood relative, parents, grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins and possibly spouses. These people live in various locations and come together for holidays or special occasions.

Explanation:

  • The joint family is differentiated from extended family as the latter reside in different compounds from the larger family. Joint family members share all duties of food collection, commerce, food processing, and children raising, and at times the social structure is so unified that the nuclear families are barely visible in the daily chores, with children addressing all the adult women as “mother.” The main aspect of the extended family is that numerous adult individuals in the family are not children's parents, although they can assume parent roles and share responsibility for the entire family, both financially and in other ways.
  • Joint families are usually at least 3 generations living together in the same household, however,  If they lived separately, they would be extended families. Moreover, members of a joint family hold a common property. Generally, the head of the family manages the property on behalf of its members.
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