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Marriage And the Family

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Title: Marriage And the Family


1
Marriage? And the Family
2
Marriage and Divorce U.S. 2001
  • Number of Marriages 2,327,000
  • Marriage Rate 8.4 per 1,000 total Population
  • Divorce Rate 4.0 per 1,000 population (46
    States reporting and Washington D.C.)

3
The Average American Marriage
  • Break into pairs.
  • What is the ideal American Marriage like? Be
    sure to discuss roles, norms, and expectations.
  • What is your experience? How does it compare and
    contrast to the ideal.
  • Join with a second group of two and discuss.

4
Recent Trends- Is Marriage Disappearing?
  • Overall divorce rates increased between 1950s
    and 1970s, but stabilized in the 1980s.
  • Black women have higher rates of marital breakup,
    lower rates of making the transition from
    separation to divorce and lower rates of
    remarriage.
  • By age 30, 3/4 of women in the U.S. have been
    married and about half have cohabitated outside
    of marriage (CDC, 2002)

5
Should We Be Concerned?
  • -In the United States during the second half of
    the twentieth century, the proportion of peoples
    lives spent in marriage declined due to
    postponement of marriage to later ages and higher
    rates of divorce. The increase in nonmarital
    cohabiting has also contributed to the decline in
    the proportion of peoples lives spent in
    marriage. Increasing rates of cohabitation have
    largely offset decreasing rates of marriage.
    CDC July 2002 p. 4

6
Children in Families
  • Today only half of American children live in
    nuclear families with both biological parents
    present. One child in five lives in a sepfamily
    and one in four lives in a single parent home.
    The number of single parents increased from 3.8
    million in 1970 to 6.9 million in 1980, a rate
    that averages out to a truly unprecedented 6
    increase each year. In the 1980s, the rate of
    increase slowed and from 1990 to 1995 it leveled
    off, but the total numbers have continued to
    mount, reaching 12.2 million by 1996. Coontz,
    1997 p. 79

7
And Baby Makes Two
  • View Film- And Baby Makes Two
  • Exercise- Take a few minutes to answer the
    following questions
  • 1) Describe the mothers in this film.
  • 2) Compare and contrast their situations with
    those of other single parents.
  • 3) What questions do you have about the
    phenomenon?
  • 4) How have readings, lectures and films made
    you think differently about the phenomena of
    single motherhood? How have they confirmed your
    observations?

8
Is Divorce a Cause or a Consequence of Change
  • Ahrons challenges us to think of divorce and
    other new family forms as adaptations to change
    rather than sources of change.
  • Changes in
  • Life span
  • Gendered Division of Labor
  • Work
  • Family Expectations

9
Divorce Rates
  • 43 of first marriages end in separation or
    divorce within 15 years. (CDC 2001).
  • One in three first marriages ends within 10
    years, and one in 5 ends within the first 5 years
  • Currently, divorce rates are relatively stable.

10
The Downside to Divorce
  • Separation and divorce can have adverse effects
    on the health and well being of children and
    adults. CDC 2002
  • Past research as shown that divorce is
    associated with higher rates of mortality, more
    health problems, and more risky behaviors such as
    increased alcohol use. Jeffrey Koplan,
    Director, CDC 2002
  • White women are seven times more likely to be
    poor after a divorce, black and Latina women are
    four times more likely.
  • For families experiencing economic hardship,
    marriage decreased the expected level. While a
    married-couple household with one child requires
    two or three times the income to escape hardship,
    a single-parent household needs four or five
    times the income.

11
What Characteristics are Common to Communities
with More Stable Marriages
  • Community Prosperity- As neighborhood poverty
    increases the likelihood that cohabitations and
    marriages will fail also increases.
  • Important indicators include
  • High median family income
  • Low male unemployment
  • Low poverty rate

12
What Causes Marriages to Break Up?
  • According to the CDC, first marriages are less
    likely to break up and more likely to succeed if
    the wife
  • Grew up in a two parent home
  • Is Asian
  • Was 20 years of age or older at age of marriage.
  • Did not have any children when she got married
  • Is college educated
  • Has more income
  • Lives in a community with a higher than average
    median income
  • Has a religious affiliation

13
Age at First Marriage Explored
  • The older a woman is at first marriage, the
    longer that marriage is likely to last. 59 of
    marriages to brides under 18 end in separation or
    divorce within 15 years, compared to 36 of those
    married at age 20 or over.
  • Early marriage is more likely for women in
    communities with higher male unemployment, lower
    median family income, higher poverty and higher
    receipt of welfare.

14
Does Separation Lead to Divorce?
  • -According to the CDC about 97 os separated
    non-Hispanic white women are divorced within 5
    years of separation, compared with 77 of
    separated Hispanic women and only 67 of
    non-Hispanic black women.
  • This does not mean the marriage remains intact,
    however, it may mean a permanent separation.

15
Remarriage?
  • Younger women who divorce are more likely to
    remarry 81 of those divorced before age 25
    remarry within 10 years, compared with 68 of
    those divorced at age 25 or over.
  • Black women are less likely than other women to
    remain in a first marriage, to make the
    transition from separation to divorce, to
    remarry, and to remain in a remarriage.
  • The likelihood that divorced women will remarry
    has been declining since the 1950's, when women
    who divorced had a 65 chance of remarrying.
    Data for 1995 show that women who divorced in the
    1980's only had a 50 chance of remarrying. CDC
    2002

16
Cohabitation, Marriage and Partnership
  • Though cohabitation has existed for centuries- if
    one examines recent trends, it has recently
    become a more common alternative to marriage.
  • According to the U.S. Census the number of
    couples cohabiting increased from 439,000 in 1960
    to 4,236,000 in 1998.

17
Are Cohabitations as Stable as Marriages?
  • The probability of a first marriage ending in
    divorce or separation after 5 years is 20, but
    the probability of a premarital cohabitation
    breaking up within 5 years is 49. After 10
    years, the probability of a first marriage ending
    is 33, compared with 62 for cohabitations.

18
Types of Cohabitors
  • 1) Couples planning to marry
  • 2) Couples Cohabiting as a temporary alternative
    to marriage
  • 3) Couples cohabiting as a permanent alternative
    to marriage
  • 4) Couples who are not legally allowed to marry

19
Cohabitation and Marriage
  • Only about 1 in 10 remain cohabiting after five
    years without either marrying or breaking up.
    However the CDC reports that intact premarital
    cohabitation that lasts 5 years or more has 70
    odds of resulting in marriage.
  • In 1970 about 11 had cohabited prior to first
    marriage to nearly half for recent first
    marriages in 1989.
  • About 40 of cohabiting unions break up without
    the couple getting married. Usually the break up
    is within the first 1 and ½ years.

20
Cohabitation is More Often an Alternative to
Marriage Among the Previously Married
  • People who are divorced and then cohabitate tend
    to form longer and more stable partnerships.
  • This group is more likely to view cohabitation as
    a permanent alternative to marriage.

21
The probability that an intact first premarital
cohabitation becomes a marriage is higher if
  • The woman is white rather than black.
  • The couple has a higher than average income
  • The woman has any religious affiliation

22
Is it a College Student Phenomenon?
  • Cohabitation has compensated for declining
    marriages the least among persons who have
    attended college. It offsets 84 of the decline
    in marriages before age 25 among persons not
    completing high school, but only 63 of those who
    attended college.
  • A higher proportion of working class people
    cohabit. Probably for economic reasons, marriage
    is out of the question for some.

23
Children and Cohabitation
  • 4 out of every 10 cohabiting couples have
    children present, though it is more likely to be
    older, divorced cohabitors.
  • 1/6 of never married cohabiting couples have a
    child that was born since they began living
    together.
  • Partners children that are not the respondents
    increases the report of trouble and decreases
    marriage expectations, whereas, if the respondent
    has children in the household that are not the
    partners, it markedly increases the expectation
    of marriage and decreases the expectation of
    never marrying.

24
New Models for Marriage
  • Peer Marriages- Pepper Schwartz It was and is
    important for me to show that men and women do
    not have to be in a hierarchical relationship-
    and that women, in particular, do not have to
    settle for anything less than a fair deal in a
    loving partnership. (1997)

25
Are More Egalitarian Marriages the Norm?
  • What we say and what we do-
  • Hoschschild- Egalitarian, Transitional and
    Traditional Couples
  • Hondagneu-Sotelo and Messner- The New Man

26
Dominant Cultural Myths About Marriage
  • The Old Ball and Chain
  • Women want to be married much more than men
  • Women benefit from marriage more than men.
  • The longer your marriage, the better it is
  • The Rise in Divorce Means We Dont Like Marriage
  • Divorce is a modern affliction
  • Strict Laws Curb Divorce

27
Blended, Step and Other New Family Forms
  • What are the challenges that blended, step and
    new families face?
  • How are new norms constructed?
  • How is kinship defined?
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