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Unmarried Cohabitation and Parenthood: here to stay

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The recent rise in unmarried cohabitation and having children outside of ... Young people now live together as a prelude to marriage or an alternative to it. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unmarried Cohabitation and Parenthood: here to stay


1
Unmarried Cohabitation and Parenthood here to
stay?
  • European perspectives
  • Valerie Boling and Melissa Long

2
Introduction
  • The recent rise in unmarried cohabitation and
    having children outside of marriage is the most
    dramatic development in many Western European
    nations
  • Cohabitation is regarded as a recent change, but
  • It includes a range of living arrangements, some
    of which are traditional.
  • Prior to the 1970s it was statistically and
    socially invisible

3
Introduction
  • In some countries there were sub-groups more
    prone to cohabitation
  • The poor
  • Broken marriages that were unable to divorce
  • Groups of rural dwellers
  • Groups ideologically opposed to marriage

4
A new form of Cohabitation
  • 1950s and 60s
  • Post-marital cohabitation was most prevalent form
  • In England, only 6 of never married women lived
    with their husband prior to marriage compared to
    25 of remarried women
  • Up to the 70s, this was considered the golden
    age of marriage because many couples were getting
    married younger. Marriage was youthful and
    almost universal.
  • During the 70s the marriage rate declined and
    the average increased

5
A new form of Cohabitation
  • 1970s through today
  • Young people now live together as a prelude to
    marriage or an alternative to it.

6
The Rise of Cohabitation Evidence from Fertility
and Family Studies
  • Younger women, aged 25 29 are more likely to
    cohabitate than older women.
  • This is true in most European countries except
    Sweden and Southern Europe.
  • In Sweden, cohabitation was established long
    before any other country
  • In Southern Europe (Italy and Spain), marriage is
    the start of the first partnership for the
    majority of women.

7
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8
The Rise of Cohabitation Evidence from Fertility
and Family Studies
  • By early 90s cohabitation eclipsed marriage for
    first partnership
  • Question is Are they durable alternatives to
    marriage?
  • How long to first partnerships starting with
    cohabitation last?
  • If you only look at relationships converting to
    marriage within the first five years, individual
    countries are similar except Sweden
  • In Sweden, 1 in 3 converted to marriage
  • In most other countries, 1 in 2 convert

9
Levels of Cohabitation
  • Cohabitation is very common in the Nordic
    countries of Denmark, Sweden, and Finland. As
    well as France.
  • The Southern European countries have very low
    levels of cohabitation, 10 or less.
  • Most countries fall in between the two extremes.

10
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11
Levels of Cohabitation
  • In most Western and Northern European countries,
    over 50 of unions are cohabitating.
  • In Southern European countries, 40 of unions are
    cohabitating.
  • Today, cohabitation is an important component in
    the totality of partnerships in most European
    countries.

12
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13
Educational Level and the Incidence of
Cohabitation
  • When cohabitation came into prominence in the
    1980s, researchers wanted to discover where it
    first took hold.
  • Results were inconclusive, either pointing
    towards
  • The poor
  • University students
  • Upper class children
  • Each country has their own ideas as to what group
    cohabitation started in.

14
Educational Level and the Incidence of
Cohabitation
  • Researchers also wanted to know about the
    education level of cohabiters.
  • Of current cohabiters, aged 25 34
  • 33 left full-time education at 17 or younger
  • 25 left between 18 and 19
  • 42 left at age 20 or older, or are still a
    full-time student.
  • Individually, countries vary. For example
  • In England, only 18 left at 20 or older, or
    still in school
  • In Denmark, 81 left at 20 or older, or still in
    school
  • The bottomline
  • There is no coherent and consistent pattern with
    the propensity to cohabitate according education
    level

15
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16
Unmarried Parenthood
  • Until the end of the 20th century marriage was
    the conventional setting for having children in
    most European nations, but has eroded since.
  • Since 1970 there has been an increase in the
    amount of childbirths outside of marriage.
  • 1970
  • Only 5 of 19 countries had non-marital birth
    rations of more than 10.
  • The frontrunner, Sweden, had 19
  • Austria is an exception because of the long
    standing tradition of marriage after the first
    child.
  • Only Sweden and Denmark show strong evidence of
    the rise in births outside marriage being
    directly related to the rise in cohabitation.

17
  • Today
  • Countries that had low ratios then tend to have
    low ratios now
  • Ireland made a significant rise from 5 to 32
  • Austria and the U.S. have lower ratios compared
    to the past.
  • The U.S.
  • The flattening of the unmarried parenthood line
    occurred after 1995 which coincides with
  • Welfare reforms
  • Decline in teen pregnancy
  • Increase in teen contraceptive use
  • The engine driving the rise in non-marital
    child-bearing is the rise in cohabitation

18
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19
Cohabitation and Children
  • In al countries, married couples are more likely
    to have a child living with them than are
    cohabiting couples.
  • Around 70 of married couples have children as
    compared to 40 of cohabiting couples.

20
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