kinshipin
Kinshipin is a sociocultural term used to describe a system of social bonds and obligations that functions like kinship but is formed through non-biological means such as shared identity, residence, or institutional design. The concept is used in anthropology, sociology, and speculative fiction to analyze how modern groups create family-like ties beyond blood or law.
The term is constructed from kinship, referring to networks of relatives, and the suffix -in, denoting a
Key features of kinshipin networks include voluntary membership, mutual obligation, resource sharing, and ritual or symbolic
Applications and debates: Proponents argue kinshipin helps explain how people form durable bonds in pluralistic societies
See also: kinship, fictive kin, social networks, diaspora communities, rite and ritual.