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Black matriarchy : ウィキペディア英語版 | Black matriarchy
The term Black matriarchy is a reference to the cultural phenomenon of African-American households with children being largely headed by mothers, with the children's biological fathers mostly absent from the household.〔Daniel P. Moynihan, ''The Negro Family: The Case for National Action'', Washington, D.C., Office of Policy Planning and Research, U.S. Department of Labor, 1965.〕〔Jesse Washington, ("Blacks struggle with 72 percent unwed mothers rate" ), NBC News, July 11, 2010.〕〔Jason L. Riley,("For Blacks, the Pyrrhic Victory of the Obama Era" ), ''Wall Street Journal'', November 4, 2012.〕 == First usage == The issue was first brought to national attention in 1965 by sociologist and later Democratic Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, in the groundbreaking Moynihan Report (also known as ''"The Negro Family: The Case For National Action"''.〔 Moynihan's report made the argument that the relative absence of nuclear families (those having both a father and mother present) in Black America would greatly hinder further Black socioeconomic progress.〔
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