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Norton, Arthur J.; Miller, Louisa F. – 1991
This paper presents results of a survey of the marriage and fertility histories of women in the United States conducted in June 1990 by the Bureau of the Census as a supplement to the Current Population Survey. The marriage and fertility history surveys were taken in 1971, 1975, 1980, 1985, and 1990. This paper focuses on recent trends in…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Children, Divorce, Marriage

Norton, Arthur J. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1980
Presents data and discussion comparing life-cycle measures of divorced women with those of women who had never divorced. Findings indicate that differences do exist in the timing of life-cycle events according to marital history, race, and education but that birth cohort association represents an overriding source of differential timing. (Author)
Descriptors: Birth, Cohort Analysis, Divorce, Evolution

Norton, Arthur J.; Glick, Paul C. – Family Relations, 1986
Documents the extent to which one-parent families tend to have social and economic characteristics that compare unfavorably with those of two-parent families. Lone fathers are shown to have a much more favorable profile than their female counterparts, but the latter show evidence of recent improvement. (Author/BL)
Descriptors: Demography, Divorce, Economic Status, Employed Women

Norton, Arthur J.; Moorman, Jeanne E. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1987
Examined recent trends and future prospects regarding marriage and divorce patterns among women in the United States. Results suggest that first marriage takes place later, more adult women will never marry, divorce has likely peaked, remarriage after divorce is declining, and women representing first 10 years of the baby boom are expected to have…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Divorce, Females, Futures (of Society)

Norton, Arthur J. – National Elementary Principal, 1979
Census Bureau statistics indicate that in 1978, 17 percent of all families were maintained by a woman with no husband present. Also, nearly 45 percent of today's children will at some point in their lives live in a one-parent family. (Author/LD)
Descriptors: Divorce, Employed Women, Females, National Surveys

Norton, Arthur J.; Glick, Paul C. – Journal of Social Issues, 1976
The discussion includes analyses of the probable causative impact of several types of changes on the stability of marriage: socio-economic variables generally associated with divorce; overall social acceptability of divorce as reflected by lessened negative economic and social sanctions; and the roles of women. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Change Agents, Divorce, Economic Factors, Family Problems

Norton, Arthur J. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1983
Used data from a 1980 national sample survey to show differences in the timing of major family life-cycle events according to age, social and economic characteristics, and marital history. Results suggest that age generational differences, more than any other factor, influence timing of life-cycle events. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Demography, Developmental Stages, Divorce

Norton, Arthur J. – Children Today, 1987
Describes social, economic, and demographic trends affecting children and families. Discusses how patterns of marriage, childbearing, divorce, remarriage, and mothers' employment in the paid labor force influence the lives of children. (SO)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Birth Rate, Childhood Needs, Demography