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Peter Saunders
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Over the last twenty years, the Australian Institute of Family Studies has established itself as a key centre for research on the family in Australia. In planning its future research directions, the Institute wants to ensure that it continues to play a positive, relevant and pro-active role in the years to come.The Australian Institute of Family Studies has recently been thinking about future directions for its research on the family in Australia.
It is clear that old agendas are changing, and that the Institute needs to be at the cutting edge of these developments. We cannot simply assume that the issues which dominated the Institute's work in the 1980s and 90s are still the pertinent issues for us to be researching in the years to come. We need to think afresh.
Through a series of internal seminars, we have been reviewing our work and its future rationale. We have not made any firm and binding decisions about the directions we should take, but we have begun to identify what we believe may be the sorts of key questions that research should be addressing over the next few years.
This Briefing Paper outlines some of the elements of a possible research agenda. The Institute welcomes discussion and feedback on these ideas.
Background: what was AIFS set up to do?
The Institute's research role was laid down in the Family Law Act 1975 which stipulates that it should:
'promote . . . by research . . . understanding of the factors affecting family and marital stability in Australia, with the object of promoting the protection of the family as the natural and fundamental unit in society.'There are four things to note about this remit.
When families are functioning properly, they contribute to stability at three levels:
The micro level:
Producing stable personalities
The American sociologist Talcott Parsons pointed out in the 1950s that
families in western cultures have lost many of their traditional tasks as a
result of industrialisation and modernisation, but he identified two areas where
they still have crucial, and unique, functions to perform:
This then points to the first core question to which the Institute should address its research:
What family arrangements (or other child care arrangements) best produce well adjusted and happy children who can fulfil their potential and grow into socially responsible and well adjusted adults?
This first core concern could lend itself to various different but highly pertinent research questions. For example:
A second core focus for the Institute should therefore relate to the successful accomplishment of these integrative and adaptive tasks. In other words, we should look at what it is that enables families successfully to stay together and to function well as social units, as well as looking at the sorts of arrangements that need to be put in place when they disintegrate.
Given its origins in the Family Law Act, the Australian Institute of Family Studies has tended in the past to put more emphasis on arrangements surrounding the failure of marriages than on the factors contributing to their success. In the future, perhaps, we should strike a better balance between these two concerns.
The core question posed at this level of analysis is:
How do stable families come to be formed, how do they succeed in managing problems and in adapting to change, and what are the best arrangements for managing the break-up of families when they can no longer function successfully?
Again, this broad question could lead into a number of different but important research areas. For example:
A third core area of family research, therefore, should focus broadly on the relation between family change and economic, political and social change. The question to be addressed is:
How are contemporary changes in the economy, the organisation of government services and local community life impacting on the stability of families, and how is family change affecting the functioning of the economy, the demands made on government, and the overall cohesion of Australian society?
The sorts of questions relevant to this theme which research might address include:
Drawing all this together, and expressing it in bald and simple terms, it can be argued that the research agenda for the Australian Institute of Family Studies should turn on three basic issues:
If these three core areas of concern do indeed indicate the sorts of areas in which family research should now be concentrated, then the next step will be to reorganise ourselves internally into three research programs, each of which will develop and run just one or two major projects.
Program I: Child development, child care and responsible
parenting
Under this umbrella, there should probably be two projects running at any one
time, one focusing on issues to do with outcomes of different patterns of child
care, and the other looking more specifically at aspects of parental roles and
responsibilities. The principal (but not exclusive) disciplinary resource in
both cases will be developmental psychology, and the research should aim to
inform government policies in areas such as maternity and paternity leave, family
benefits, family counselling, and child care provision and regulation. In addition,
the Institute will continue to support research on the prevention of child maltreatment
under the auspices of the National Child Protection Clearing House.
Program II: Marriage, family functioning and family
law
This program will probably also run two major projects at any one time, one
specifically aimed at informing family law issues (for example, property settlements,
child access, family mediation), and the other aimed rather at understanding
and therefore promoting the factors contributing to the success of marital and
de facto partnerships. Work here will probably be grounded in the areas of social
demography, sociology and socio-legal studies, and this program's policy relevance
should lie, not simply in its close association with the concerns of the Family
Court, but also in advising on matters to do with marital counselling and the
social support of families at different stages of the life cycle.
Program III: The family, social change and social
cohesion
Here we should be looking at the way different families combine varying degrees
of economic self-reliance with use of state services and community networks,
and the results that follow from different mixes of these three sets of resources.
The disciplinary basis of this program will be mainly sociology and welfare
economics, and research in this area should explicitly inform current policy
debates regarding issues such as how to discourage the emergence of an underclass
culture of state dependency, the need to encourage family self-reliance, and
the concern about the erosion of community networks and social civility (often
referred to as 'social capital').
What now?
Over the last twenty years, the Australian Institute of Family Studies has established itself as a key resource in family studies in Australia. Our research planning must ensure that the Institute continues to play a positive, relevant and pro-active role in the years to come.
The Institute is in the process of finalising its research program for the next three years and beyond. Feedback on the ideas set out in this Briefing Paper would be most welcome. The author would also be pleased to discuss the issues further with interested parties.
Contact Professor Peter Saunders, Research Manager, Australian Institute
of Family Studies, 300 Queen Street, Melbourne 3000, Victoria, Australia. Phone
(03) 9214 7888. Fax (03) 9214 7839. Email petersaunders@aifs.org.au
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