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“Indian families are becoming smaller, but not necessarily more egalitarian.” Examine. Identify the emerging fault lines within the household.

Kartavya Desk Staff

Topic: Society

Topic: Society

Q1. “Indian families are becoming smaller, but not necessarily more egalitarian.” Examine. Identify the emerging fault lines within the household. (10 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: InsightsIAS

Why the question To connect demographic change such as smaller family size with the deeper sociological reality that power relations inside households may remain unequal. It also evaluates your ability to identify new forms of intra-family tensions in contemporary India. Key Demand of the question You have to examine the statement by showing why declining family size does not automatically translate into equality in roles, decision-making, care work and resource control. Then you must identify the emerging fault lines within households such as care burdens, asset control, digital surveillance and inter-generational conflicts. Structure of the Answer: Introduction Start with a crisp context on fertility decline, nuclearization and modernisation, and contrast it with the persistence of patriarchy and unequal bargaining within households. Body Smaller families, but not necessarily egalitarian: Explain how smaller families can still reproduce unequal gender roles, authority structures, and control over mobility, money and unpaid work. Emerging fault lines within households: Identify new tensions such as gendered care burden, financial decision control, inheritance and property disputes, digital monitoring and privacy conflicts, eldercare stress, and autonomy tensions for women and youth. Conclusion Close by stating that household equality requires redistribution of care, assets and voice, and that demographic transition alone does not ensure egalitarian family relations.

Why the question To connect demographic change such as smaller family size with the deeper sociological reality that power relations inside households may remain unequal. It also evaluates your ability to identify new forms of intra-family tensions in contemporary India.

Key Demand of the question You have to examine the statement by showing why declining family size does not automatically translate into equality in roles, decision-making, care work and resource control. Then you must identify the emerging fault lines within households such as care burdens, asset control, digital surveillance and inter-generational conflicts.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction Start with a crisp context on fertility decline, nuclearization and modernisation, and contrast it with the persistence of patriarchy and unequal bargaining within households.

Smaller families, but not necessarily egalitarian: Explain how smaller families can still reproduce unequal gender roles, authority structures, and control over mobility, money and unpaid work.

Emerging fault lines within households: Identify new tensions such as gendered care burden, financial decision control, inheritance and property disputes, digital monitoring and privacy conflicts, eldercare stress, and autonomy tensions for women and youth.

Conclusion Close by stating that household equality requires redistribution of care, assets and voice, and that demographic transition alone does not ensure egalitarian family relations.

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