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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
Gong, Min – Journal of Family Issues, 2007
This study tests status inconsistency theory by examining the associations between wives' and husbands' relative statuses--that is, earnings, work-time, occupational, and educational inconsistencies--and marital quality and global happiness. The author asks three questions: (a) Is status inconsistency associated with marital quality and overall…
Descriptors: Marital Instability, Ideology, Psychological Patterns, Marital Satisfaction
Amato, Paul R.; Hohmann-Marriott, Bryndl – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2007
We used data from Waves 1 and 2 of the National Survey of Families and Households to study high- and low-distress marriages that end in divorce. A cluster analysis of 509 couples who divorced between waves revealed that about half were in high-distress relationships and the rest in low-distress relationships. These 2 groups were not artifacts of…
Descriptors: Divorce, Marriage, Marital Satisfaction, Marital Instability
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
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
Kalmijn, Matthijs; Monden, Christiaan W. S. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
We test the so-called escape hypothesis, which argues that for people from a poor marriage, a divorce has a less negative or even a positive effect on well-being. In an analysis of two waves of the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 4,526), we find only limited evidence. When people divorce from a dissatisfactory or unfair marriage,…
Descriptors: Divorce, Well Being, Marital Satisfaction, Marital Instability
Gerard, Jean M.; Krishnakumar, Ambika; Buehler, Cheryl – Journal of Family Issues, 2006
Contemporaneous and longitudinal associations among marital conflict, parent-child relationship quality, and youth maladjustment were examined using data from the National Survey of Families and Households. Analyses were based on 551 married families with a child age 5 to 11 years at Wave 1. The concurrent association between marital conflict and…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Conflict, Parent Child Relationship, Marriage

Szinovacz, Maximiliane E.; Egley, Lance C. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1995
Addresses effects of reporting bias on spouses' answers to questions by comparing one-partner and couple data on marital violence. Results indicate significant underreporting of violence, and that some predictors of violence are significantly related to underreporting by one spouse. (JPS)
Descriptors: Battered Women, Behavior, Bias, Data Collection