Other Free Encyclopedias » Marriage and Family Encyclopedia » Marriage: Cultural Aspects » Zambia - The Structure Of The Zambian Family, Family Formation, Socialization, Beliefs, Urban Families

Zambia - The Structure Of The Zambian Family

children matrilineal father families

A Zambian family, like families elsewhere, can be thought of as a group. The most important duties of this group are to reproduce, nurture, and educate the young to become productive members of the family and the society at large. This training process is also referred to as socialization. The head of the Zambian family can either be the father or a maternal uncle. If it is a maternal uncle, the mother, more than the father, plays a crucial role in decision making within the family. These matrilineal families are very common in Zambia. In matrilineal families, the authority and power to make decisions rests with the mother and her relatives. In some family types, the father is the decision maker. These patterns of authority and power are passed from one generation to the next in Zambia.

In the patrilineal system, the transfer of wealth is from father to his children. In matrilineal families, children belong to the maternal uncle. In some instances, the father may have more than one wife, although this polygamous type of family is rare in Zambia.

A larger proportion of Zambian families are matrilineal than are patrilineal in organization. Within the country's nine provinces, most households in the four provinces of Central, Northwestern, Luapula, and Copperbelt are matrilineal. The Namwanga and the Ngoni in the Eastern province, the Lozi in the Western, and the ILA in the Southern province are patrilineal. These groups are also patrilocal. That is, after marriage, the couple lives in the husband's family house or close to his father's household. Daily activities such as eating and educating the young are seldom conducted in the privacy of one's house. Zambian villages have a central place governing the village. This place is called Insaka or Nsaka. In the matrilineal villages, the Insakas are located at the village center.

Fostering is common in Zambia. When couples fail to have children, they often become foster parents. It is also very common among siblings to foster care; that is, children are fostered by aunts and uncles. A survey of households in Kitwe, the second largest city in Zambia, found that about 14 percent of all children aged fourteen and younger, and nearly 18 percent of children aged to ten to fourteen years were not living with their parents (Ahmed 1996). The estimates of the extent of fostering in other African countries, such as Ghana, are much higher. Often fostered children are considered and treated as though they are biological offspring. When families are forced to adopt children following some misfortune, foster children may become victims of abuse and neglect.


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about 4 years ago

hello yes I must say that I am and African American woman who is married to and African man and sometimes it is hard to understand what it is that he wants from his wife and I some times dont understand the custom of what it is that he has been threw and is going threw but I am trying to learn and understand the way that is in front of me. I know that his way of doing things is a lot different from the way that I would do it. But sometimes I just need to talk to someone who is a woman and understand were I am comeing from as a woman

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over 1 year ago

how westernisation industralisation and modernisation has disrupted the various ties of extended family in zambia

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about 4 years ago

Good stuff, it really helped me for the presentaion about the family situation in zambia, iam a Zambian studying social work at the university of south bohemia in the Czech Rep, in Europe,

Thanks!