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Showing 1 to 15 of 19 results Save | Export
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DaWalt, Leann Smith; Usher, Lauren V.; Greenberg, Jan S.; Mailick, Marsha R. – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2019
Friendships and social participation are key domains of quality of life for individuals with intellectual disabilities. This study examined the friendships, social and recreational activities, and family social networks of individuals with intellectual disabilities from two distinct diagnostic groups: individuals diagnosed with fragile X syndrome…
Descriptors: Friendship, Quality of Life, Adolescents, Adults
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Musick, Kelly; Bumpass, Larry – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2012
This article addresses open questions about the nature and meaning of the positive association between marriage and well-being, namely, the extent to which it is causal, shared with cohabitation, and stable over time. We relied on data from the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 2,737) and a modeling approach that controls for fixed…
Descriptors: Marriage, Well Being, Health, Persuasive Discourse
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Erol, Ruth Yasemin; Orth, Ulrich – Developmental Psychology, 2014
We examined the effects of self-esteem development on the development of relationship satisfaction in 2 samples of couples. Study 1 used data from both partners of 885 couples assessed 5 times over 12 years, and Study 2 used data from both partners of 6,116 couples assessed 3 times over 15 years. The pattern of results was similar across the 2…
Descriptors: Self Esteem, Interpersonal Relationship, Satisfaction, Predictor Variables
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Dew, Jeffrey – Family Relations, 2011
Few studies have examined how financial relationship issues are associated with cohabiting individuals' risk of union dissolution or marriage. Competing-risks Cox regressions using the cohabiting data in the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 483) found that financial disagreements predicted union dissolution, whereas disagreements…
Descriptors: Marriage, Interpersonal Relationship, Housework, Money Management
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Joyner, Kara – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2009
Are cohabiting couples more likely than married couples to break up in response to perceptions that their relationship is not fair? Based on social psychological perspectives on intimate relationship stability, in addition to empirical research contrasting cohabitation with marriage, I hypothesize that cohabiting couples will be more likely than…
Descriptors: Intimacy, Interpersonal Relationship, Marriage, Social Psychology
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Amato, Paul R.; Meyers, Catherine E.; Emery, Robert E. – Family Relations, 2009
To study changes in nonresident father contact since the 1970s, we pooled data from 4 national surveys: the National Survey of Children (1976), the National Survey of Families and Households (1987 - 1988), the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (1996), and the National Survey of America's Families (2002). On the basis of mothers' reports,…
Descriptors: National Surveys, Children, Fathers, Parent Child Relationship
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Sassler, Sharon; Cunningham, Anna; Lichter, Daniel T. – Journal of Family Issues, 2009
The authors examine whether young adults who experienced their parents' divorce and new relationships have different relationship trajectories than those who spent their childhoods living with biological parents in married-couple families. The analysis is based on longitudinal reports from more than 1,500 children from Wave 1 of the 1987-1988…
Descriptors: Context Effect, One Parent Family, Divorce, Young Adults
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Hohmann-Marriott, Bryndl E.; Amato, Paul – Social Forces, 2008
This study focuses on the factors underlying differences in relationship quality between interethnic and same-ethnic couples. Using the National Survey of Families and Households and the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study, we examine relationship satisfaction, interpartner conflict and subjective assessments of relationship instability in…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Marriage, Interpersonal Relationship, Intergroup Relations
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Xu, Xiaohe; Hudspeth, Clark D.; Bartkowski, John P. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
Using 3 subsamples of remarried respondents (n=1,583, 971, and 926) in the first wave of the National Survey of Families and Households, this study investigates how different types of cohabitation, especially postdivorce cohabitation, affect the timing and quality of remarriage in the United States. Ordinary Least Squares regression analysis…
Descriptors: Marriage, Spouses, Divorce, Marital Instability
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Willetts, Marion C. – Journal of Family Issues, 2006
A longitudinal analysis is conducted on the union quality of long-term cohabiting and legally married couples using data from both waves of the National Survey of Families and Households. An analysis of racially homogamous (Anglo-American and African American) couples indicates that the cohabitors and marrieds do not differ significantly with…
Descriptors: Marriage, Anglo Americans, African Americans, Marital Satisfaction
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Sassler, Sharon; Goldscheider, Frances – Journal of Family Issues, 2004
This article examines union entrance among never-married young men, focusing on whether the importance of a man's being economically established to marry has decreased in this new era of cohabitation and working wives. The authors test this assumption by examining marriage and cohabitation as competing risks to see whether the importance of…
Descriptors: Marriage, Males, Labor Force, Family Structure
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Hohmann-Marriott, Bryndl E. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
Cohabiting couples and couples who cohabit prior to marriage have less stable relationships than married couples who did not cohabit, and these differences in stability may be linked to different processes within the relationships. This research examines the similarity of partners' beliefs about the division of household labor using the National…
Descriptors: Spouses, Housework, Interpersonal Relationship, National Surveys
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Raley, R. Kelly; Frisco, Michelle L.; Wildsmith, Elizabeth – Sociology of Education, 2005
Despite the dramatic increase in children's experiences in cohabiting families, little is known about how living in such families affects children's academic success. Extrapolating from two theoretical frameworks that have been commonly used to explain the association between parental divorce and educational outcomes, the authors constructed…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Interpersonal Relationship, Educational Objectives, Mothers
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White, Lynn – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1999
Examines affective relationships from the perspective of both parent and child. Results show that parents' affect is related to martial quality and the partner's relationship with the child. Children's affect for mothers and for fathers is related to their feelings toward the other parent but not to their parents' martial quality. Includes…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Fathers, Interpersonal Relationship, Marital Satisfaction
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Atkinson, Maxine P.; Greenstein, Theodore N.; Lang, Molly Monahan – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2005
To explain wife abuse, we offer a refinement of relative resource theory, gendered resource theory, which argues that the effect of relative resources is contingent upon husbands gender ideologies. We use data from the first wave of the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 4,296) to test three theories of wife abuse. Resource theory…
Descriptors: Spouses, Family Violence, Family (Sociological Unit), National Surveys
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