Hillary Clinton’s 1996 book, “It Takes a Village,” is based on the idea that children need to be cared for by an entire community, not just by their own families. She said it was based on an African proverb — “It takes a village to raise a child” — but there are questions about whether it even originated there.
Now it turns out that the maxim isn’t even true. A University of Michigan researcher says that African kids raised in nuclear families do just as well as those raised by extended families or “villages.”
“In the African villages that I study in Mali, children fare as well in nuclear families as they do in extended families,” said Beverly Strassmann, professor of anthropology and faculty associate at the UM Institute for Social Research. “There’s a naïve belief that villages raise children communally, when in reality children are raised by their own families and their survival depends critically on the survival of their mothers.”
Pearl Harbor: Simple sneak attack or culmination of FDR’s plan for war?
Gingrich threatens to skip debates if he can’t dictate audience rules
Illegal bribes mean a politician is corrupt, but the legal things he does are just as immoral
Today is surgery for me; I’ll give you news and be back when I can
Youth and death are bookends pointing toward truth between
Insane incentives create insane results as kids are paid to attend classes
We have a hunger for love just as strong as the need for food, water