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BOOKS: Too Few Good Men
By Amy L. Wax
Amy L. Wax on Promises I Can Keep: Why Poor Women Put Motherhood Before Marriage by Kathryn Edin and Maria Kefalas and American Dream: Three Women, Ten Kids, and a Nation’s Drive to End Welfare by Jason DeParle
Kathryn Edin and Maria Kefalas.
Promises I Can Keep: Why Poor Women Put Motherhood Before Marriage.
University of California Press. 312 pages. $24.95.
Jason DeParle.
American Dream: Three Women, Ten Kids, and a Nation’s Drive to End Welfare.
Viking. 432 pages. $25.95.
Everyone
knows families are not what they used to
be. Marriage has declined everywhere, out-of-wedlock births have
increased across the board, and single parents are now commonplace.
Although that’s the received wisdom, it’s only partly
true. As Charles Murray noticed decades ago and demographers have
known for some time, the structure of families has diverged
drastically by social class. Among women with no more than a high
school education, the out-of-wedlock birth rate has grown rapidly
since the 1960s and is now approaching half of all births. In contrast,
single motherhood is still rare among college graduates,
representing less than five percent of births among this group
overall. Almost all college graduates still marry eventually, but
marriage rates are dropping steadily among those without a high
school degree. Divorce has declined among the well-off since the 1980s but is climbing
among the unskilled. Racial variations confound these differences.
Among college-educated women, the rate of out-of-wedlock
childbearing for blacks is ten times higher than for whites.
Although white marriages have achieved greater stability over the
past 30 years,
black marriages at every level dissolve more frequently. As a
result, many more black children in all income brackets grow up
with one parent. As noted by Sara McLanahan in her recent
presidential address to the Population Association of America,
these trends tell an ominous story: The offspring of the well-off
receive a growing share of parental time, attention, and investment
and grow up in stable and orderly homes. The less privileged
frequently endure a fractured and chaotic family life.
Understanding these trends presents a challenge
for students of family life. Why have the well-off and
well-educated continued to live fairly conventional domestic lives
while the families of the lower classes have fallen apart? This
puzzle broods heavily over Kathryn Edin and Maria Kefalas’s Promises I Can Keep: Why Poor Women Put Motherhood
Before Marriage and Jason
DeParle’s American Dream: Three
Women, Ten Kids, and a Nation’s Drive to End Welfare. Both focus on families at the bottom of the income
scale, exploring the lives of the women (and some men) who occupy
the precarious juncture between the working and welfare classes,
and both paint a revealing, candid, and sometimes lurid picture of
their domestic, reproductive, and personal lives.
In American Dream, Jason DeParle, a journalist
who covers poverty and welfare issues for the New York Times,
follows three African-American women and their intertwined families
in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in the period surrounding welfare reform
under the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act of 1996. His account is
based on months of observation and discussion with the women and
their family members, boyfriends, welfare caseworkers, and
employers, as well as with administrators and program directors
statewide. The result is a finely observed portrait of unskilled
women confronting the demands of new welfare policies and the
chaotic conditions of inner-city life, deftly interspersed with a
legal, bureaucratic, and administrative account of poor relief in
Wisconsin during the reform era. DeParle is particularly
concerned with whether reform has achieved one of its chief
declared goals: to reverse the decline in the nuclear family that
coincided with welfare’s decades-long expansion and is
sometimes blamed on its influence. On this point DeParle proceeds
cautiously, advancing more questions than answers. In the end he
concludes, reluctantly and provisionally, that work-based welfare
reform has failed to produce the hoped-for benefits. The lives of
his own subjects confirm that the changes wrought by the new rules
have done little to shore up their fractured families. Although
welfare reform succeeds, after fits and starts, in transforming
these women from dependent welfare mothers into reasonably steady
workers, domestic disorder continues to roil their lives. As
parents they are loving but erratic and ineffectual. Their shifting
contingent of consorts, housemates, and boyfriends is as feckless
as ever. Respectable married life eludes them.
In Promises I Can
Keep, Kathryn Edin and Maria Kefalas,
urban ethnographers and social scientists, draw their account from
interviews with 162 single mothers in eight Philadelphia-area low-income
neighborhoods. The discussions probe the forces, motives, values,
and life conditions that lead most of these women to have children
while still young and unmarried. Although welfare reform and the
vagaries of low-wage work form the story’s backdrop, the
primary focus is on patterns of childbearing and the relations
between the sexes. The authors’ goal is to understand why
extramarital births have increased and marriage rates declined
among the least educated and least skilled population of urban
women.
Edin and Kefalas are talented and sedulous
ethnographers. Their field work is strong and careful and their
portrait of poor women’s lives vivid and sympathetic. The
book’s introduction offers promise of a fresh analysis: In
the proper spirit of humility, the authors describe the fate of the
working-class family as “perhaps the biggest demographic
mystery of the last half of the twentieth century.” Unlike
many academic sociologists, they adopt a strong pro-marriage tone
and credit the evidence that stable, two-parent families benefit
adults and their children. They likewise do not blink at the class
split in family structure and marital behavior. They recite the
bleak demographic facts and are skeptical of long-discredited
explanations — such as a shortage of employable men —
for the decline in marriage among the less educated.
Nonetheless, their book ultimately fails.
Despite promising beginnings, the authors fall victim to tired
social science dogmas. Their fealty to bad ideas hinders a full
excavation of the rich lode of material they have so painstakingly
assembled. They miss the message of their own fieldwork and the
clear implications of broader social trends. The result is a lost
opportunity to discover the true causes of family upheaval and to
think constructively about the cures for its decline.
Why do the women in this study so rarely marry
and so often end up as single mothers? Most express a strong desire
to marry and view extra-marital childbearing as “second
best.” Yet almost all remain single. The authors offer this
explanation: Expectations for marriage have risen across the board.
People now regard marriage as a luxury good rather than as a
necessity. They refuse to tie the knot unless they have first
achieved economic success. A house, a well-paying job, and enough
money for a nice wedding are now needed before considering a trip
to the altar. But few of the unskilled can make good on their
aspirations because wages at the bottom have stagnated or declined.
To their credit, the authors do not exaggerate the extent of these
trends. Although they note (correctly) that unskilled men’s
earnings have lost ground relative to college graduates’ and
that some well-paying jobs have disappeared, they acknowledge that
the overall economic prospects of men with a high school education
or less are not significantly worse than in past decades when
marriage rates were much higher. It’s not that most unskilled
men are less able to support a family than they were decades ago;
earnings for this group were always modest. Rather, the problem is
that women — and men — expect far more.
In contrast, conclude Edin and Kefalas, having
children carries no such inflated requirements. Babies need not
await the achievement of an elevated position in life, because
childbearing is a fundamental hallmark of female adulthood that is
central to poor women’s dignity and identity. In the
authors’ words, “women rely on their children to bring
validation, purpose, companionship, and order to their often
chaotic lives — things they find hard to come by in other
ways.” In a perverse inversion of old values, these woman
have come to regard lone motherhood as the ultimate heroic act, the
proving ground of their responsible devotion to others.
At first blush, the authors’ theory about
why marriage is unpopular among the less educated appears to
explain demographic reality. Rising expectations generate a class
divergence in marriage rates for the simple reason that the
well-off are better able to fulfill those expectations than the
poor and uneducated. Yet despite superficial appeal, the
authors’ explanation just doesn’t fly. First and
foremost, their conclusions are at odds with what their women
subjects actually say. More broadly, the authors’ thesis
cannot be reconciled with the full range of facts regarding racial
and class differences in family structure. A growing body of social
science evidence suggests that group mores and personal behavior,
not insufficient resources, are the most important cause of marital
decline.
This
book is replete with evidence that
men’s anti-social behavior, not unfulfilled economic
expectations, is the main obstacle to matrimony among this group.
The women do not complain of men’s failure to earn enough,
but rather of their unwillingness to grasp opportunities, work
steadily, and spend wisely. The objection is not to modest earning
power, but to financial profligacy, defiant attitudes, and lack of
work discipline. These women bear tales of their men mouthing off
to bosses, alienating fellow workers, failing to get to work on
time or at all, behaving erratically, quitting abruptly, or
avoiding work altogether. What money the men manage to earn is
seldom applied to family needs, but is dissipated on luxuries such
as “alcohol, marijuana, new stereo components, computer
accessories, expensive footwear, clothing and jewelry.” But
poor work habits and financial irresponsibility are the least of
it. The most vociferous complaints are reserved for men’s
chronic criminal behavior, drug use, violence, and, above all,
repeated and flagrant sexual infidelity. Most men made no effort to
hide their frequent liaisons, which were often carried on
simultaneously. More often than not, those relationships produced
babies. Offspring by other partners loomed especially large as
obstacles to stable and harmonious relationships. Women resented
children fathered with other girlfriends as evidence of a
man’s imperfect devotion and as a drain on his attention and
resources. The presence of a woman’s children by previous
boyfriends also produced conflict by undermining the man’s
authority and engendering divided loyalties.
The circumstances are no different in Jason
DeParle’s picture of inner-city life in Milwaukee and in
other recent accounts of urban working-class existence such as
Adrian LeBlanc’s Random Family and Orlando Patterson’s Rituals of Blood. The men in
these books also openly reject sexual fidelity and flout the most
basic standards of male responsibility toward women and children.
The women, for their part, haven’t figured out how to
influence men for the better or have given up trying. They are
resigned to the situation and actively complicit in it. They
don’t hesitate to sleep with other women’s men and
willingly bear children by more than one father. Their response is
to take what they can get: temporary companionship, fleeting love
and attention, a good time, and, above all, the children their men
leave behind.
These stories of conflict, distrust, and
disappointment do not point to rising expectations, economic or
otherwise. These women do not hold their men to new and higher
standards. They want what women have always wanted: men who are
steady, faithful, considerate, and industrious. The virtues they
seek in a husband — dependability, fidelity, honesty,
frugality — are those that women have always sought. What has
changed is men’s willingness to fulfill these requirements by
living up to age-old standards. Although the women foster the
men’s bad habits by having sex and babies with them despite
the men’s irresponsibility, they still cling to the old
expectations. Their dashed hopes transform marriage into an
impossible and unattainable dream.
That dismal values and reckless choices are the
chief obstacles to marriage in low-income communities is a truth so
obvious that even Edin and Kefalas can’t help but succumb.
Telling concessions are scattered throughout the book. The authors
describe the one man who comes closest to displaying the
traditional bourgeois virtues as his neighborhood’s
“equivalent of a Rhodes Scholar.” They admit that
although job market difficulties are a strain on relationships,
unemployment is “seldom the relationship breaker.”
Rather, the real problem is
the man’s unwillingness to “stay
working” even when he can find a job. Or he may blow his
earnings on partying or stereo equipment. But most women point to a
larger problem than a lack of money, such as chronic womanizing.
Elsewhere the authors acknowledge that their
women agree on the elements of responsible male adulthood: Sexual
fidelity, steady work, abiding by the law, and assisting with
childrearing are all on everyone’s list. Above all, their
subjects want the fathers of their children “to become a
responsible adult.” The authors more than once concede that
the men in these neighborhoods behave “considerably
worse” than the women, that they seldom fulfill expectations,
and that this all but dooms prospects for stable family life. These
admissions catch the authors in their own contradictions. Their
notion that the decoupling of marriage and childbearing can be laid
primarily at the feet of rising economic expectations seems to come
out of nowhere. The idea becomes more fantastical and less
persuasive with every page. In a last-ditch effort to shore up
their thesis, Edin and Kefalas rely heavily on some women’s
direct statements of their desire to achieve material well-being
— to secure a steady job, accumulate money in the bank, and
even own their own home — before getting married. But in
taking these wishes at face value, Edin and Kefalas ignore their
deeper roots. What comes through is these women’s failure to
see marriage as a long-term cooperative venture. Instead of a
mutual striving toward economic prosperity, marriage is a
precarious gamble. Economic independence serves as a hedge against
their men’s inconstancy. As one mother states: “I want
to have everything ready in case something goes wrong.” Her partner of the moment
provides little reason to think that things will go right.
At
times, Edin and Kefalas seem to
appreciate that the most plausible explanation for these
women’s material aspirations is that their men cannot be
relied on. They concede that failed relationships and distrust
“make marriage seem risky” and that women “mitigate this risk by
holding marriage to a high standard both in economic and relational
terms.” But in the end they fail to draw the obvious lesson.
They are blinded by their grand idea: The quest for prosperity
before marriage manifests the broader cultural desire, peculiar to
the zeitgeist, for “more” of everything.
Why
do the authors hold out for this
position in spite of all evidence to the contrary? One factor may
be the policy agenda that follows — one that embraces
activist government and economic redistribution. The view that
nonmarriage and out-of-wedlock childbearing are all about economic
opportunity fits with the conviction that public money, policy
gimmicks, and political will — not basic good conduct —
are the solutions to family disarray. The problem is not that
people are behaving badly or that — heaven forbid — one
class is more prudent than another, but that our policies are
inadequate. Material conditions, not moral commitments, are the
source of domestic chaos. To change behavior, we must give the poor
more resources. Raise economic prospects for the least skilled men
and women and the problem will fix itself.
The problem with this outlook is that
it’s hopelessly outdated. Decades of experience belie the
view that economic transfers can rescue disintegrating families or
that government programs can substitute for good conduct. There is
little evidence that poor relief and welfare policy, whether strict
or lenient, can effectively promote marriage, reduce out-of-wedlock
childbearing, or turn men into responsible husbands and fathers. As
DeParle notes, recent developments are not to the contrary. Despite
welfare reform’s resounding success in moving women from
welfare to work, the two-parent family has shown few signs of
recovery.
Given that public policy has never yet revived
the nuclear family, it is not surprising that social science has
yet to explicate the link between resources and family form. How
lack of money dictates behaviors destructive of marriage remains an
enduring mystery, especially since low-income families among some
cultural groups remain exceptionally strong. Likewise, although
more resources may ease family life, it’s not clear how they
can cure the profligacy, violence, and sexual recklessness that
destroy relationships. Despite decades of social science
investigation, the black box of causation is firmly closed. The
route from a higher hourly wage back to the bourgeois virtues
remains obscure. The authors of these volumes can’t draw us a
road map and they don’t even try.
If anything, the best evidence we have suggests
that causation runs in the opposite direction. Moral commitment
generates resources; wise behavior can secure economic well-being.
As Christopher Jencks and others have argued, even people with
little education and few skills can greatly reduce their risk of
poverty and provide a decent upbringing for their offspring by
following three simple rules — graduate from high school,
work steadily, and marry before bearing children. Although the
people depicted in these accounts rarely achieve this hat trick,
the few who do confirm the point. Consider Jewell and Ken, a couple
in American Dream. Despite a checkered history that includes drugs,
out-of-wedlock childbearing, spells on welfare, a criminal
conviction, and imprisonment, this couple manages to settle down to
steady work and a sober and law-abiding life. Their jobs as a
nursing aide and pizza delivery man, to which they apply themselves
with devotion, bring in about $40,000 a year. They remain faithful to each other and
have a child together. Although they can’t quite bring
themselves to marry, they acquire a decent apartment, basic
household appliances, and an impressive array of electronic
gadgets, including cell phones, a personal computer, and a video
camera. By dint of great effort, they achieve, in DeParle’s
words, “a toehold on a lower-middle-class life.” The
hope is that they will eventually move up from there.
Although Ken and Jewell prove it can be done,
they are but one data point — what demographers
contemptuously dismiss as “anecdata.” But Edin and
Kefalas don’t really improve on this — their project is
anecdata writ large. Although revealing in some respects, their
book stands as a poster child for the dangers of academic
ethnography. Their narrative method, which allows a focus on a
narrow slice of society, makes it too easy to ignore inconvenient
facts. Not only do their conclusions fly in the face of their own
investigations, but they flout a growing consensus among
sophisticated demographers that material and economic factors
cannot fully explain the widening class divide in family structure.
Social scientists have long labored to explain
the emerging disparities in family structure by pointing to social
conditions and economic obstacles. Factors thought to impede
marriage among the less skilled include stagnating male earnings,
new women’s labor market opportunities, and lopsided sex
ratios from male incarceration, early death, and male unemployment.
But as Christopher Jencks and David Ellwood at Harvard have
observed, the usual suspects do not account for more than a small
portion of observed race and class shifts in marital and
reproductive behavior.
Take
the bromide that low marriage rates
can be traced to male unemployment. That does nothing to explain
the rapid decline in marriage among working-class men with jobs
— a decline that accounts for a large portion of nonmarriage
within the group. Nor are unskilled men’s low earnings a full
explanation, as the mothers they fail to marry are increasingly
likely to be in the workforce. If these working couples joined
forces, their earnings would usually suffice to bring their
families above the poverty line. Yet those couples remain apart.
Racial patterns also challenge the received wisdom. Marriage rates
among blacks are much lower than among other ethnic groups, but the
reason usually cited for this disparity — too few
marriageable men — explains only a small portion of observed
patterns. The crux of the problem is that black men across the
socioeconomic spectrum, from the lowest skilled to the best
educated, marry at far lower rates than similarly qualified men
from other groups. Incarceration and early death, although
contributing to disparities, have a minor effect on the shortfall.
To the extent that black male unemployment and low earnings reduce
the number of desirable partners, the data suggest that these are
as much an effect as a cause of low marriage rates. All this
evidence suggests that nonmarriage among blacks is largely a matter
of choice. The key is not the externals, but that blacks are
responding differently from other groups to similar constraints.
Economic factors likewise fail to account for
reproductive and sexual practices of the educated elite. Almost all
white women with at least a college degree marry before bearing
children. Economic prospects would appear to be the first-line
explanation. After all, well-educated husbands are more desirable
because they earn more. But the ability to snag a prosperous
husband ultimately fails to explain upper-class women’s
propensity for marriage because it looks to only half the equation.
Privileged women are far better equipped, economically and
otherwise, to go the single-motherhood route than their less
educated counterparts. Yet unlike their less well-off sisters, they
still insist upon marriage before children.
In
the most sophisticated economic
model developed so far, George Akerlof and his colleagues attribute
the recent secular decline in marriage and increase in
out-of-wedlock childbearing to the technological
“shock” of the birth control pill. Their theory is
that, by increasing the availability of sex outside marriage, the
pill both subverted men’s willingness to submit to shotgun
marriages and caused more pregnancies. The result was more babies
born to unmarried women. But this model fails to account for the
emergence of social class differences. Although women in every
class abandoned the norm of premarital chastity, privileged women
continue to avoid premarital childbearing and to insist upon
marriage before children. There is no evidence that differences in
access or skill in using birth control explain this pattern.
Rather, poor women somehow became more willing to have babies
without getting married and less likely to marry.
What we know of why marriages endure suggests
that male behavior may be crucial to these class divisions. Would
college-educated white women long stand by men who were as
habitually and notoriously unfaithful as the men depicted in these
books? Even assuming that educated men are better providers and
more effectively socialized to the world of work, it strains
credulity that their female counterparts would put up with such
antics just for the money. One possibility is that better-off men
more often honor monogamy and strive for sexual fidelity. Which
doesn’t mean they never cheat. But how they cheat, and how
often, may make all the difference. As Jonathan Rauch has noted,
discretion and hypocrisy are the hallmarks of middle-class
adultery. In its effects on family stability, the occasional or
hidden lapse is worlds apart from infidelity as a way of life.
Likewise, “multiple partner fertility,” which is a
potent relationship killer, would seem to be unusual among educated
men. At least the numbers show that unmarried women of their class
are unwilling to bear “love children.” And these
men’s open acknowledgment of such children would appear to be
relatively rare. But the very discretion and restraint that make
sexual adventurism less destructive of better-off families also
make it harder to investigate. Edin and Kefalas interview no
comparison group, so one cannot know from their study whether
higher income women would make comparable claims. There is
remarkably little hard data on class differences in extra-marital
sex and little evidence of attempts to document them. Most likely
that is because few social scientists are eager to posit such
differences or to stress their potential importance.
In spite of these uncertainties, this much is
clear: Economic disparities can’t begin to account for
observed patterns. This suggests that marital and sexual behavior
are more a matter of values than of money. Cultural commitments,
social norms, and individual choices, rather than access to
material resources, best account for class and ethnic differences
in family structure.
Seeing
culture as primary is at odds with
the position, which Edin and Kefalas so clearly favor, that
government programs and economic redistribution are the way to
solve social problems. As already noted, if economics is paramount
and culture unimportant, family disintegration must be ascribed to
outside factors such as lack of opportunity — problems that
only the government can solve. But if mores are the key to family
structure and some choices better promote well-being under similar
constraints, it follows that moral commitments loom larger than
external conditions. Material circumstances do not dictate
behavior, and manipulating resources won’t automatically cure
what ails fragile families. A stress on cultural norms points to
individual and community reform, not government action, as the
solution to family decline. Yet that stance is thought to
“blame the victim.”
Another source of hostility to cultural
explanations is a misguided egalitarianism that insists that the
poor are no different from you and me. A fundamental tenet is that
we all share the same values and aspirations. It follows that
everyone would respond to similar hardships the same way. Indeed,
Edin and Kefalas claim that marriage is so valorized and respected
among their study population that couples hesitate to take the
plunge if there is even a chance of failure. To the extent culture
enters the picture at all, their subjects participate in a
“trend affecting the culture as a whole.” Just like
everyone else, they regard marriage as a luxury good rather than as
a necessity. But the effects of that trend “look somewhat
different for the middle class than for the poor.” What it
all boils down to, of course, is money. If resources and
opportunities were only better, the disadvantaged would have the
same families as everyone else. On this view, there are no
behavioral subcultures by class or race and no distinct group norms
that critically shape behavior.
The evidence that social expectations and
normative commitments, not economic circumstances, best account for
class differences in family structure undermines this view. People
are not equal in their ability to handle newfound sexual freedom.
The sexual revolution, with its laxer standards of conduct in favor
of self-directed sexual innovation, has hit the less privileged
harder than the affluent. Foresight, restraint, capacity for
self-governance, and prudence, which make for occupational and
economic success, are also qualities that make for orderly
families. If these attributes are more common or more valued among
the economically successful, then that group’s adoption of a
distinct sexual subculture in the wake of the sexual revolution
would be no surprise and could fully account for observed
differences in family structure.
Social scientists’ tendency to discount
culture and stress material circumstances is not a matter of
political ideology alone. The quest for “science” also
plays a role. Seeing group norms as unimportant and external
conditions as primary fits with a view of human nature that is
amenable to systematic explication and with a science of human
decision-making that aspires to the rigor of established fields.
The rational actor model is a darling of this view. If individuals
are rational decisionmakers motivated primarily by a personal
cost-benefit calculus, then human choice becomes rule-like,
quantifiable, and predictable.
This
model, if taken to extremes,
distorts the realities of social life. Nonetheless, its influence
in social science is pervasive. Edin and Kefalas do not escape: The
model’s conceptual commitments dominate their work. A central
tenet is that everyone is equally rational: All persons can be
expected to take similar steps to maximize their individual
well-being. Since identical circumstances will elicit the same
behavior, it follows that disparate conditions — not
different behavioral choices — are the ultimate cause of
divergent results.
There is little room in this paradigm for
distinct cultural values as a principal source of success or
failure. Nor can this worldview even acknowledge the possibility of
personal or group dysfunction. On the rational actor model,
everyone is doing the best he can under the circumstances. Either
persons cannot do otherwise or we cannot reasonably expect them to.
Ambient conditions both explain and dictate human action.
If taken to its logical limits, this paradigm
has disconcerting implications. Not only is it hard to square with
a robust conception of moral choice, but it also sits uneasily with
normative judgments of human conduct. The desire to create an
“objective,” value-free social science fuels the
resistance to assessing some ways of life as superior to others or
to attributing bad outcomes to poor decisions or deficient values.
But the reluctance to label any behavior as self-destructive is a
signal defect in any approach to social life. Some people and
groups clearly accomplish more and achieve greater success under
similar constraints. Some groups are better at promoting beneficial
behavior and fostering a higher morality. As Thomas Sowell has
argued repeatedly, any account of human life that fails to
acknowledge these realities ultimately proves unsatisfactory.
Finally, the reluctance to see culture as
primary may reflect social science’s methodological
limitations. Culture resists precise dissection and quantification.
The methods now available to analyze social life are inadequate to
the task. There is no fully satisfying exposition of the
relationship of culture to behavior and no comprehensive theory of
personal and group dysfunction. We do not know why some individuals
harm their own interests or why some groups are more successful in
developing and cultivating virtue and success. David Brooks’s
recent call, in a New York Times op-ed column, for heightened attention to
“cultural geography” has not yet been heeded. No
academic stampede in that direction is likely, if only because
negative comparison between groups is now so politically incorrect.
Social science is far from achieving a full
understanding of how cultural values affect social life, but it is
not wholly devoid of ideas for approaching these complexities.
Although work on group norms is in its infancy, concepts such as
“contagion” or “tipping” are beginning to
enter the lexicon and influence understanding. Game theory also
holds promise. Game theoretic models of group interactions show how
customs that are harmful to individuals and groups can become
entrenched. As economist Robert Frank has also noted, practices can
arise that benefit individuals (at least in the short term) but
harm the group — that are good for one and bad for all. Game
theory also sheds light on the vital function of morality: Frank
and others have observed that moral rules coordinate cooperative
social strategies and foster group success.
These approaches have much to teach scholars of
the family. Their implications are not wholly unsympathetic to the
dilemmas individuals face. Group norms, once entrenched, are
tenacious. Individuals who buck the crowd pay a price or risk
futility. Ostracizing felons becomes harder if most men have been
to jail. Single motherhood loses its stigma if every mother lacks a
husband. A faithful husband is a chump if everyone else is playing
the field. The challenge comes down to a problem of collective
action — of reforming failed group norms from within. That
task requires first owning up to internal failure. In depicting
single motherhood as the expected outgrowth of external conditions
and broader cultural trends, Edin and Kefalas undermine that
project. They do their subjects no service.
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