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James, Spencer L.; Beattie, Brett A. – Social Forces, 2012
Using data from 2,898 women from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth-1979, we employ a novel method to examine two perspectives, social selection and the experience of cohabitation, commonly used to explain the negative relationship outcomes cohabiting women report. Results reveal cohabitation is negatively related to marital happiness and…
Descriptors: Females, Interpersonal Relationship, Marital Satisfaction, Conflict
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Warner, Tara D.; Manning, Wendy D.; Giordano, Peggy C.; Longmore, Monica A. – Social Forces, 2011
Research links sex ratios with the likelihood of marriage and divorce. However, whether sex ratios similarly influence precursors to marriage (transitions in and out of dating or cohabiting relationships) is unknown. Utilizing data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study and the 2000 U.S. Census, this study assesses whether sex ratios…
Descriptors: Marriage, Males, Marital Satisfaction, Divorce
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Jaeger, Mads Meier – Social Forces, 2011
This article analyzes the effect of three aspects of physical attractiveness (facial attractiveness, Body Mass Index and height) on socio-economic and marital success over the life course. In a sample of high school graduates from Wisconsin followed from their late teens and until their mid-60s, I find that (1. taller men have higher earnings than…
Descriptors: Careers, Body Composition, Socioeconomic Status, High School Graduates
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Sobolewski, Juliana M.; Amato, Paul R. – Social Forces, 2007
We assessed the associations between parents' marital discord and divorce, patterns of parent-child relationships, and adult children's subjective well-being. Parental divorce and marital conflict appeared to increase the odds that children were close to neither parent in adulthood. Parental divorce (but not marital conflict) appeared to increase…
Descriptors: Marital Satisfaction, Divorce, Conflict, Parent Child Relationship
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Dew, Jeffrey – Social Forces, 2009
Qualitative and quantitative research has suggested that married couples handle the increasing demands of intensive parenting norms and work expectations by reducing spousal time (e.g., the time that spouses spend alone with each other). Using nationally representative time-diary data, this study examined whether married individuals with children…
Descriptors: Marital Satisfaction, Child Rearing, Time, Spouses
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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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Wolfinger, Nicholas H.; Wilcox, W. Bradford – Social Forces, 2008
Researchers have found that religious participation is correlated with marital satisfaction. Less is known about whether religion also benefits participants in nonmarital, intimate relationships or whether religious effects on relationships vary by gender. Using data from the first three waves of the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study, we…
Descriptors: Religion, Marital Status, Intimacy, Fathers
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Williams, Kristi; Sassler, Sharon; Nicholson, Lisa M. – Social Forces, 2008
This study examines whether the mental and physical health of single mothers benefit from marriage or cohabitation compared to childless women who marry. Results indicate that marrying is associated with similar declines in psychological distress for single mothers and childless women, but only when that marriage endures. Single mothers do not…
Descriptors: Mothers, Marital Satisfaction, Females, Physical Health
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Wilcox, W. Bradford; Nock, Steven L. – Social Forces, 2006
The companionate theory of marriage suggests that egalitarianism in practice and belief leads to higher marital quality for wives and higher levels of positive emotion work on the part of husbands. Our analysis of women's marital quality and men's marital emotion work provides little evidence in support of this theory. Rather, in examining women's…
Descriptors: Evidence, Marital Satisfaction, Females, Marriage
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Umberson, Debra; Williams, Kristi; Powers, Daniel A.; Chen, Meichu D.; Campbell, Anna M. – Social Forces, 2005
Marital relationships, like individuals, follow a developmental trajectory over time with ups and downs and gains and losses. We work from a life course perspective and use growth curve analysis to look at trajectories of change in marital quality over time. Although the tendency is for marital quality to decline over time, some groups begin with…
Descriptors: Marital Satisfaction, Interviews, Marriage, Longitudinal Studies
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Myers, Scott M. – Social Forces, 1997
Data from a national sample of married adults, interviewed four times between 1980 and 1992, do not support the idea that unhappily married couples use childbearing as a strategy to increase solidarity and reduce marital uncertainty. Instead, results indicate that a solid marriage and compatibility between spouses encourage parenthood and…
Descriptors: Birth, Longitudinal Studies, Marital Instability, Marital Satisfaction
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Hawkins, Daniel N.; Booth, Alan – Social Forces, 2005
The present study shows that long-term, low-quality marriages have significant negative effects on overall well-being. We utilize a nationally representative longitudinal study with a multi-item marital quality scale that allows us to track unhappy marriages over a 12-year period and to assess marital happiness along many dimensions. Remaining…
Descriptors: Marriage, Marital Satisfaction, Divorce, Life Satisfaction
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Amato, Paul R.; Booth, Alan – Social Forces, 1991
Among 1,243 adults nationwide, individuals who experienced parental divorce as children scored lower than those from happily intact families of origin on measures of psychological, social, and marital well-being. Multiple parental divorces and divorces involving deterioration of parent-child relations appeared particularly problematic. Contains 39…
Descriptors: Adult Children, Divorce, Family Influence, Marital Instability
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Amato, Paul R.; And Others – Social Forces, 1995
For 471 adult children of persons in a longitudinal study of marital instability, the long-term consequences of parental divorce depended upon level of parental conflict prior to separation. Adult offspring who had experienced high levels of parental conflict followed by divorce had levels of psychological and marital well-being as high as…
Descriptors: Adult Children, Divorce, Family Violence, Friendship