Family life is very important in the Lebanese culture. Family functioning is associated with the values of
collectivism in the Lebanese society. One person's family functioning is indicative of their individual status and identity. The average household size ranges between 3.9 and 4.9.
Kinship Patrilineal kin group is another major unit of identity for the Lebanese. The actual extent of
identity through
kin groups varies. Large
clans are typically more traditional and have political and economic ties to its unit. Instead, extended families are generally the boundaries of which these kin groups separate. The Lebanese household serves as the center of these kin groups. There are little variations in
kinship patterns in the rural and urban areas of Lebanon. The value of family loyalty is heavily emphasized within these kin groups. One important expectation of family loyalty is nepotism, where family members are expected to find employment for each other, in order for its family unit to function and survive.
Children and parenting Child-rearing practices are characterized by abundant protection imposed on children by parents. Unlike Western societies, parental control does not stop at the age of 18; instead, it continues for as long as the child lives in the parents' residence or until the child marries. In some villages, when the first boy has been given birth to, the married couple is no longer addressed by their given names alone but is also called by the name of their son – "father of x" and "mother of x". ==Gender roles==