ABSTRACT
This work attempted to investigate how the changes from
traditional agricultural society to industrializing one affected the
kinship/family system of the Ideato people particularly the Urualla Community.
As an agrarian society, the Ideato people live together; share their existence
collectively in large descent groups and extended families. Communal land
including forest resources, the hallmark of their survival and existence, hence
the close and affectionate kinship bond among relatives and family members.
This situation was found to have changed as people engaged in paid (wage)
employment and were living separate from their families several miles away in
satellites or urban centers, kinship bonds began to weaken as people now tended
to concentrate on solving their own personal problems and those of their
immediate family wife, husband or children. In this research, 200 people were
sampled. It was realized that the role of the family has changed because of the
effects of modernization which have expanded social cultural, economic,
political, moral and ethical obligations and responsibility of the family with
a reciprocal benefit to support it, hence the weakening of the kinship ties in
contemporary times even the extended family remains the bedrock of the African
family system.
TABLE CONTENTS
TITLE. i
CERTIFICATION.. ii
DEDICATION.. iii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT. iv
ABSTRACT. vi
TABLE CONTENTS. vii
CHAPTER ONE.. 1
INTRODUCTION.. 1
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY. 1
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM.. 4
1.3 RESEARCH QUESTIONS. 6
1.4 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY. 7
1.5 SIGNIFICANCE
OF THE STUDY. 8
1.6 DEFINITIONS OF TERMS. 9
CHAPTER TWO.. 11
LITERATURE REVIEW.. 11
2.1 REVIEW OF RELATED
LITERATURE. 11
2.2 CONCEPT OF FAMILY. 11
2.3 CONCEPT OF KINSHIP. 12
2.4 KINSHIP AND FAMILY
RELATIONS IN CULTURAL SETTING. 14
2.5 INHERITANCE AND
SUCCESSION PRACTICES. 19
2.6 REVIEW OF RELATED
THEORIES. 30
2.7 CONVERGENCE HYPOTHESIS. 36
CHAPTER THREE.. 39
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY.. 39
3.1 RESEARCH DESIGN.. 39
3.2 STUDY AREA.. 39
3.3 SCOPE OF STUDY. 40
3.4 POPULATION OF THE STUDY. 40
3.5 SAMPLE
SIZE.. 41
3.6 SAMPLE TECHNIQUE.. 42
3.7 INSTRUMENT
FOR THE DATA COLLECTION.. 42
3.8 VALIDITY
OF THE INSTRUMENT.. 43
3.9 RELIABILITY
OF THE INSTRUMENTS.. 43
CHAPTER FOUR.. 44
DATA ANALYSIS.. 44
4.1 SOCIO-DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS OF RESPONDENTS. 44
4.2 THEMATIC ANALYSIS. 48
CHAPTER FIVE.. 54
CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION.. 54
5.1 SUMMARY OF
FINDING.. 54
5.2 DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS. 55
5.3 CONCLUSION.. 57
5.4 RECOMMENDATIONS. 59
REFERENCE.. 61
APPENDIX I. 63
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Modernization as a concept denotes the modernifications
that are experienced in all aspects of human environment, which are mearnt to
suit present circumstances in human society (Ezema M.C 1998). It refers to the
transformed nature of a traditional type of society into a more
technologically, sophisticated, and advanced type, associated with industrial
society. No wonder Nweke (2003) argues that modernization is a process in which
society becomes more internally differentiated and complex and in which science
and technology guide change.
Increasing contacts with the outside world has introduced
new ideas into African culture. Enveloping idea came with the experience of
Trans-Atlantic and Trans-Sahara slavery, colonialism, Christianity and Islam,
industrialization and the advancing globalization (Hunter G. 1969) influence of
foreign ideas, artifacts and religion of Africa
is the modernizing effects of kinship/family system in Nigeria.
In discussing the place of the “impact of traditional
kinship/family system in Nigeria”,
Urualla community in Ideato to North Local Government Area Imo state is used as
a case study. It is worthy to note that as a patrilineal society, the family
and kinship system in urualla is rooted in the ancestral land which constituted
“wealth” of the whole people – the living, the dead and generations yet unborn.
Land, in urualla and else where is not only regarded as
God’s divine gift to the people, but also provided the link between the living
and the dead. It is for this reason that the sanctity of land as a source of
wealth and the resting place of our ancestors is well preserved. This explains
the reasons why the different clan or ethnic group regard as bases for identity
and association. The strong identification of the urualla people in their
“place of origin is anchored on their belief and attachment to their ancestors
through their land (the Ihejiamaizu, 2002). Altruism is the motto of the
traditional people and a sin against one person is considered as a sin against
all. These ties were in the ancient Urualla before the wake of colonialism.
Before the advent of colonialism, Urualla people were
dominantly peasant farmers who depended wholly and entirely on land for their
survival. Land is communally distributed to individuals through their extended
families. While land is held in common, it is worthy of mention that even in the
primitive times, crops and wild fruits were not owned or distributed throughout
the community. Each man gathers to feed his household, so as to reward on land
belonged to the individual or family who performed it as a unit of the society
(Talbot, 1969).
In Urualla and Ideato as a whole, man’s estate is inherited
by his children usually according to their ages starting from the first son to
the last one. When a man has no male child his eldest brother or any other male
relative is made the heir to the estate of the person whether he was
in-capcitated or deceased. The successor automatically assumes the main
responsibility of maintaining members of the family entrusted in his care. The
estate or property left in his custody is usually given to him in trust for the
whole family, so each family member has a claim on it, as a result there is
mutual solidarity among them to protect the land and cater to the welfare of
their needy members because of their belief that most of them will come back
into the same circle of life after this present similar help whenever they
reincarnate into life again.
In observance of the family responsibility and obligation to
the people, the head of the house sets up an economic base and marries a wife
for every son in the family. The family is held accountable for the behaviour
of all its members to the extent that sometimes the right, privilege and duties
of individuals subsumed or merged into those of extended family.
With the arrival of the white man in the land, things
began to fall apart with the increased influence of his government, education,
technology, wage employment e.t.c. the authority of the extended family and the
strong kinship ties that once existed started weakening in Urualla resulting to
the growth of nuclear family structure with its attendant impersonality.
1.2 STATEMENT OF
THE PROBLEM
The family and kinship ties in urualla were stronger fifty
years ago than they are today. In the past fifty years, the people were more
altruistic than the present generation, as such there were more able to live
together with one another peacefully (Ihejiamazu, 2002). Furthermore, there was
greater in security in those days because of intertribal war. They stay
together to protect each other. Additionally the scope of operated a strictly
subsistent economy, producing only for food and depended only on land for their
living. The socio-economic order of the olden times did not develop value
system that emphasized wealth and materialism as it is today. The
pre-occupation of the people was focused on how to meet basic necessities in
life. Their beliefs, traditions, customs, values and culture were held
sacrosanct because the people live together as one united entity under the
watchfully eyes of the elders.
Colonialism exposed the people to new ways of thinking and
new ways of doing things, thus challenging the sanctity of the traditional
values, beliefs and customs.
Modernization had altered the whole fabric of the society.
The communal land meant to be held in trust for the community for all and
sundry to have access had been taken possession of by a few powerful members on
longer depends on the ancestral land for the livelihood and as such have
migrated the stateliness centers in search of greener pastures (Kottak, 1991).
Advances in technology and science have reduced the whole
wide world to a global village such that the primitive custom of inheriting
one’s late brother’s wife (Levirate) has been rejected by women as an
infringement on their fundamental human rights.
The aspect of inheritance and succession even
discrimination no longer exist between the male and female children. The made
relatives today only serve as administration or the estate of the deceased.
The expanded scope of responsibility of extended family
structure in the modern dispensation with out a corresponding increase in the
wealth (resources) of the people has weakened family and kinship ties in Urualla.
1.3 RESEARCH
QUESTIONS
1. To what extent is the extended family structure in modern
day Urualla still performing its traditional functions?
2. How can the extended family structure in modern day Urualla
strengthen family and kinship ties in the olden days?
3. To what extent has the weakening family and kinship ties
in modern day Urualla been caused by social change introduced by modernization?
4. What better ways can extended family be organized to
strengthen family and kinship in the modern day extended structure?
1.4 OBJECTIVES OF
THE STUDY
This study seeks to investigate the following:-
1. The extent to which the extended family structure is
working to strengthen family and kinship ties among the different kinship
groups in Urualla.
2. Whether or not extended family structure is still helping
to preserve the culture and traditional values in urualla.
3. Whether or not the weakening family and kinship ties are caused
by modernization.
4. The extent to which the extended family structure and
kinship ties can be strengthened under the new dispensation.
1.5 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
This study is important because it provides a background
understanding on how the African traditional values systems as entrenched in their beliefs, customs,
traditions and culture at contradictions to modern scientific innovations,
inventions and discoveries that came in the wake of industrialization and
modernization.
The research seeks to show how society changes in the
contemporary world have weakened the cultural values of the Nigerian rural
traditional society, which in fact was the custodian of our ancient culture and
civilization. Furthermore, the study is, however necessary to correct the
enormous impression earlier created by family and kinship obligations were exposed
to the rules of modern day industrial society.
The study is also intended to identify and clarify the
obligations of the extended family system that had faded away with the
encroachment of industrialization and urbanization with a view in them.
1.6 DEFINITIONS
OF TERMS
The following conceptual definitions are given of key
terms as they are used in this study:-
1. The family: In this work, the family refers to a group of people
comprising father, mother and children linked by marriage and blood respectively,
sharing a common residence in economic co-operation and solidarity.
2. The extended family: This refers to all people claiming descent from a common
ancestor, kinship or linked by marriage in a lineage, clan e.t.c. It comprises
father, mother, siblings, grandfather, grandmother, uncles e.t.c. It reduces
the interdependence of the young ones on their biological parents and promotes
strong kinship ties.
3. The nuclear family: This refers to the biological family made up of father,
mother and the children both natural and adopted.
4. Kinship: It is the relationship among kins. Kins are persons
related by real, putative and fictive consanguinity. Kinship is the socially
recognized genealogical relationship both consanguinal and affinal. It may
include, socially, recognized relationship based on supposed as well as actual
genealogical ties.
5. House hold: This is simply a group of people who share common
residence and are united by bond of marriage, birth or adoption.
6. Marriage: This is the socially approved relationship involving both
sexual activities and economic co-operation. It involves the process of
gathering intelligence as to the rightness of the genealogical distance by both
kin groups as well as whether the approved limits since there are marriage
prohibitions.
7. Modernization: It is the enthronement of modern facilities such as
education, urbanization, industrialization e.t.c. in a traditional society. It
is also defined as the transformation of the nature of traditional type of
society to a more technologically sophisticated type of society.
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