collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26023246/recession-and-divorce-in-the-united-states-2008-2011
#1
Philip N Cohen
Recession may increase divorce through a stress mechanism, or reduce divorce by exacerbating cost barriers or strengthening family bonds. After establishing an individual-level model predicting U.S. women's divorce, the paper tests period effects, and whether unemployment and foreclosures are associated with the odds of divorce using the 2008-2011 American Community Survey. Results show a downward spike in the divorce rate after 2008, almost recovering to the expected level by 2011, which suggests a negative recession effect...
October 2014: Population Research and Policy Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21491803/freedom-to-divorce-or-protection-of-marriage-the-divorce-laws-in-denmark-norway-and-sweden-in-the-early-twentieth-century
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nathalie Le Bouteillec, Zara Bersbo, Patrick Festy
In the period 1909-1927, new laws concerning divorce and marriage were enacted by the Scandinavian countries. Both at the time and more recently, these laws were considered as "liberal" as they promoted greater freedom to divorce based on individuality and gender equality. In this article, the authors first analyze the changes in these Family laws in the early twentieth century. Then, the authors study the effect of these laws on divorce and marriage patterns. As these laws did not modify the trend in divorce rates, the authors ask why this was the case...
2011: Journal of Family History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24357879/women-s-education-marital-violence-and-divorce-a-social-exchange-perspective
#3
Derek A Kreager, Richard B Felson, Cody Warner, Marin R Wenger
Drawing on social exchange theories, the authors hypothesized that educated women are more likely than uneducated women to leave violent marriages and suggested that this pattern offsets the negative education - divorce association commonly found in the United States. They tested these hypotheses using 2 waves of young adult data on 914 married women from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. The evidence suggests that the negative relationship between women's education and divorce is weaker when marriages involve abuse than when they do not...
June 1, 2013: Journal of Marriage and the Family
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24338643/culture-and-demography-from-reluctant-bedfellows-to-committed-partners
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christine A Bachrach
Demography and culture have had a long but ambivalent relationship. Cultural influences are widely recognized as important for demographic outcomes but are often "backgrounded" in demographic research. I argue that progress toward a more successful integration is feasible and suggest a network model of culture as a potential tool. The network model bridges both traditional (holistic and institutional) and contemporary (tool kit) models of culture used in the social sciences and offers a simple vocabulary for a diverse set of cultural concepts, such as attitudes, beliefs, and norms, as well as quantitative measures of how culture is organized...
February 2014: Demography
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23630405/attitudes-toward-divorce-commitment-and-divorce-proneness-in-first-marriages-and-remarriages
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah W Whitton, Scott M Stanley, Howard J Markman, Christine A Johnson
A random multistate sample of married individuals ( N = 1,931) was used to explore whether more positive attitudes toward divorce and weaker commitment to marriage may contribute to the greater instability of remarriages than first marriages. Remarried adults, whether or not they brought children from a previous union into the remarriage, reported marital quality (happiness and conflict) equal to those in first marriages. They also reported more positive attitudes toward divorce, which were associated with higher divorce proneness (i...
April 1, 2013: Journal of Marriage and the Family
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23421844/a-randomized-clinical-trial-of-the-effectiveness-of-premarital-intervention-moderators-of-divorce-outcomes
#6
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Howard J Markman, Galena K Rhoades, Scott M Stanley, Kristina M Peterson
This study examined the effects of premarital relationship intervention on divorce during the first 8 years of first marriage. Religious organizations were randomly assigned to have couples marrying through them complete the Prevention and Relationship Education Program (PREP) or their naturally occurring premarital services. Results indicated no differences in overall divorce rates between naturally occurring services (n = 44), PREP delivered by clergy at religious organizations (n = 66), or PREP delivered by professionals at a university (n = 83)...
February 2013: Journal of Family Psychology: JFP
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23052366/the-gray-divorce-revolution-rising-divorce-among-middle-aged-and-older-adults-1990-2010
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Susan L Brown, I-Fen Lin
PURPOSE: Our study documents how the divorce rate among persons aged 50 and older has changed between 1990 and 2010 and identifies the sociodemographic correlates of divorce among today's middle-aged and older adults. DESIGN AND METHOD: We used data from the 1990 U.S. Vital Statistics Report and the 2010 American Community Survey (ACS) to examine the change in the divorce rate over time. ACS data were analyzed to determine the sociodemographic correlates of divorce...
November 2012: Journals of Gerontology. Series B, Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22995666/the-relationship-between-mortality-and-time-since-divorce-widowhood-or%C3%A2-remarriage-in-norway
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kjersti Norgård Berntsen, Oystein Kravdal
The chance of dying within any given year probably depends not only on marital status in that year but also on earlier partnership history. There is still not much knowledge about such effects, however. Our intention is to see how mortality is associated with time since divorce, bereavement and remarriage and time between marital disruption and remarriage. We use register data that include the entire Norwegian population aged 40-89 from 1970 to 2008 (70,701,767 person-years of exposure and 1,484,281 deaths)...
December 2012: Social Science & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22822285/the-specter-of-divorce-views-from-working-and-middle-class-cohabitors
#9
Amanda J Miller, Sharon Sassler, Dela Kusi-Appouh
Young Americans increasingly express apprehension about their ability to successfully manage intimate relationships. Partially in response, cohabitation has become normative over the past few decades. Little research, however, examines social class distinctions in how emerging adults perceive challenges to sustaining intimate unions. We examine cohabitors' views of divorce and how these color their sentiments regarding marriage. Data are from in-depth interviews with 122 working- and middle-class cohabitors...
December 2011: Family Relations
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22549155/union-formation-in-later-life-economic-determinants-of-cohabitation-and-remarriage-among-older-adults
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jonathan Vespa
This study builds on Becker's and Oppenheimer's theories of union formation to examine the economic determinants of marriage and cohabitation during older adulthood. Based on the 1998-2006 Health and Retirement Study and a sample of previously married Americans who are at least 50 years old, results show that wealthier older adults, regardless of gender, are more likely to repartner than stay single. Wealth has no discernable effect on the likelihood of remarrying versus cohabiting. Among the oldest men, the positive associations between wealth and repartnering are entirely due to housing assets...
August 2012: Demography
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22125355/reconsidering-the-good-divorce
#11
Paul R Amato, Jennifer B Kane, Spencer James
This study attempted to assess the notion that a "good divorce" protects children from the potential negative consequences of marital dissolution. A cluster analysis of data on postdivorce parenting from 944 families resulted in three groups: cooperative coparenting, parallel parenting, and single parenting. Children in the cooperative coparenting (good divorce) cluster had the smallest number of behavior problems and the closest ties to their fathers. Nevertheless, children in this cluster did not score significantly better than other children on 10 additional outcomes...
December 2011: Family Relations
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21858932/joint-physical-custody-and-neighborhood-friendships-in-middle-childhood
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ariana Prazen, Nicholas H Wolfinger, Caitlin Cahill, Lori Kowaleski-Jones
Almost half of first marriages end in divorce, which in turn may produce joint physical custody arrangements. Seen by many states to be in the best interest of the child, joint physical custody is increasingly common. Yet much is unknown about its consequences for children. This article considers how joint physical custody arrangements affect children’s neighborhood friendships, an important component of child well-being because of their contributions to social and cognitive development. Thirteen parents and 17 children (aged 5–11) in 10 families, selected via convenience and snowball sampling, participated in semistructured interviews...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19110902/no-trend-in-the-intergenerational-transmission-of-divorce
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jui-Chung Allen Li, Lawrence L Wu
Previous studies on trends in the intergenerational transmission of divorce have produced mixed findings, with two studies (McLanahan and Bumpass 1988; Teachman 2002) reporting no trend in divorce transmission and one study (Wolfinger 1999) finding that divorce transmission has weakened substantially. Using a stratified Cox proportional hazard model, we analyze data from the National Survey of Families and Households and find no evidence for any trend in divorce transmission. To reconcile apparent differences in results, we note that the General Social Survey data used by Wolfinger lack information on marital duration, permitting analysis only for whether respondents have divorced by interview...
November 2008: Demography
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18937142/the-intergenerational-transmission-of-divorce-in-cross-national-perspective-results-from-the-fertility-and-family-surveys
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jaap Dronkers, Juho Harkonen
We used data on women's first marriages from the Fertility and Family Surveys to analyse the intergenerational transmission of divorce across 18 countries and to seek explanations in macro-level characteristics for the cross-national variation. Our results show that women whose parents divorced have a significantly higher risk of divorce in 17 countries. There is some cross-national variation. When compared with the USA, the association is stronger in six countries. This variation is negatively associated with the proportion of women in each cohort who experienced the divorce of their parents and with the national level of women's participation in the labour force during childhood...
November 2008: Population Studies
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15209038/the-impact-of-welfare-reform-on-marriage-and-divorce
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marianne P Bitler, Jonah B Gelbach, Hilary W Hoynes, Madeline Zavodny
The goal of the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act was to end needy parents' dependence on governmental benefits, in part by promoting marriage. The prereform welfare system was widely believed to discourage marriage because it provided benefits primarily to single mothers. However, welfare reform may have actually decreased the incentives to be married by giving women greater financial independence via the program's new emphasis on work. This article uses vital statistics data on marriages and divorces during 1989-2000 to examine the role of welfare reform (state waivers and implementation of Temporary Assistance to Needy Families) and other state-level variables on flows into and out of marriage...
May 2004: Demography
https://read.qxmd.com/read/12320093/a-cross-national-analysis-of-family-and-household-structure
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
X Fu, T B Heaton
"Profound demographic change has taken place in the past few decades in many countries including decreases in fertility and household size, and increases in divorce and non-traditional living arrangements. This paper analyzes the cross-national variation in these trends by utilizing two data sets. Fertility, marriage/divorce and household structure are modeled as separate domains of family life and tested in a LISREL model. The correlations across these domains are examined along with indicators of socioeconomic development and cultural context...
1995: International Journal of Sociology of the Family
https://read.qxmd.com/read/12048955/stability-across-cohorts-in-divorce-risk-factors
#17
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Jay D Teachman
Over the past quarter-century, many covariates of divorce have been identified. However, the extent to which the effects of these covariates remain constant across time is not known. In this article, I examine the stability of the effects of a wide range of divorce covariates using a pooled sample of data taken from five rounds of the National Survey of Family Growth. This sample includes consistent measures of important predictors of divorce, covers marriages formed over 35 years (1950-1984), and spans substantial historical variation in the overall risk of marital dissolution...
May 2002: Demography
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