First of all I think it is essential to say that this can not be answered without consideration to cultures. The nuclear family may or may not be the most productive for us (using us to represent UK because that's where the majority of the board are from) but there is no way you can argue that the 'nuclear family' or 'cereal box family' as it is sometimes called (think of cereal adverts) is the most stable environment for children in all cultures. Like someone mentioned, a lot of families in Asia don't have and would be horrified at the thought of a nuclear family. Their childhood is also very stable, so straight away I can establish there is no link between a stable childhood and the nuclear family.
However moving back to Britain, it is a very common misconception that the nuclear family was the most common type of family before a certain time, I've seen 1960s branded around in this thread. That wasn't the case. If we look at just the 20th century to keep it relevant, the most common type of family throughout the 20th century was the extended family. You can look at the census if you doubt me and it will give you the evidence (everyone else is on about opinions) that is needed to corroborate with my argument.
This argument arises now because it is believed that children are wild, have no respect, hate education and are hellbent on causing destruction to everything they touch. Well, look through any old news archive website and you can see this has always been the case. Even when the nuclear family was a rarity, which it was and in my opinion will be again soon. It is not a new phenomena - children are exactly that, children. Not many are 'stable' whilst growing up because well, they're growing up and grappling with their surroundings.
I don't think the nuclear family is the only stable environment, you could argue just as easily for the opposite. When you're living with two parents who have been together for 20+ years it is only natural for them to become fed up and or annoyed at one another. The friction between the two can cause a detrimental effect on the child's upbringing and ensure that their environment is a volatile as opposed to stable.
Common misconception. Like I said look on any archive site which discusses news. These aren't new phenomena - they're decades old. It is just now, in the society we live in, it is easier for this news to reach us and spread so we're under the illusion that children don't have father figures and because of this are uncontrollable. Think about the world-war period when millions of fathers were absent. Were all the children running about causing havoc then, no. Of course you can argue you can't compare that era to any other but you're arguing and you're quite firm about it that you need a father figure in your life. Is not the case.
Awful stereotype. I'm not sure on statistics but so many parents get divorced now, I wouldn't be surprised to see the figure at 30/40% if not slightly higher. Children will become unstable if their environment isn't stable, granted. However, there are more factors that divorce that contribute to this. If their parents argue and say perhaps one is subject to domestic abuse, those are more detrimental features on an upbringing. To say you disagree with divorce is ignorant too. When the man she thought she knew turns around one day and hits her, should she accept this just so a couple of people condone her. No. You're living in a time before 2011.We rightly look down on divorce (or at least some of us still do) because it breaks a family up, and anybody who has attended school will notice, and i'm sorry for the sterotype here but its blindingly unavoidable, that the pattern is that children who have divorced parents/do not know one parent are more likely to be disruptive.
Which I think proves her point perfectly. They don't have the classical nuclear family and there is a strong case, like you say, that these cultures are a lot more conservative and their children perhaps have more stable environments. You contradict yourself here by suggesting that the extended family seen in Italy and Asia uphold values as opposed to the nuclear family which you still see in Britain/America and then you continue to say that the nuclear family is the family that creates the most stable environment.Originally Posted by -:Undertaker:-
It fell much before then. Think of how many lives were lost in the war. Think of when the extended family ceased to be so popular (1920/1930s) the nuclear family is still dominant but it isn't as strong as people believe/want to believe.Originally Posted by -:Undertaker:-





) is the most stable environment for children in all cultures. Like someone mentioned, a lot of families in Asia don't have and would be horrified at the thought of a nuclear family. Their childhood is also very stable, so straight away I can establish there is no link between a stable childhood and the nuclear family. 





