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Kamp Dush, Claire M.; Taylor, Miles G. – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
Using typologies outlined by Gottman and Fitzpatrick as well as institutional and companionate models of marriage, the authors conducted a latent class analysis of marital conflict trajectories using 20 years of data from the Marital Instability Over the Life Course study. Respondents were in one of three groups: high, medium (around the mean), or…
Descriptors: Marital Instability, Group Membership, Conflict, Marriage
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Amato, Paul R.; Kane, Jennifer B. – Journal of Family Issues, 2011
The authors used data from the Add Health study to estimate the effects of parents' marital status and relationship distress on daughters' early family formation transitions. Outcomes included traditional transitions (marriage and marital births) and nontraditional transitions (cohabitation and nonmarital births). Relationship distress among…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Daughters, One Parent Family, Interpersonal Relationship
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Takyi, Baffour K.; Gyimah, Stephen Obeng – Journal of Family Issues, 2007
Although previous work has attributed the instability of African marriages to the diffusion of Western norms and values in the region, fewer attempts have been made to empirically assess how Africa's internal institutional structures, such as extended kinship ties, impact marital outcomes. Guided by rational choice and exchange theories, we argue…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Foreign Countries, Marriage, Divorce
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Wu, Zheng – Journal of Family Issues, 1995
Examines the role of premarital cohabitation as a determinant of cohabitation after marital disruption. The author proposed that people who cohabitated prior to first marriage were more likely to cohabitate after marital disruption than those who did not. It was found that the hazard rate of postmarital cohabitation was over 50% higher for…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Cohabitation, Interpersonal Relationship, Marital Instability
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Teachman, Jay D. – Journal of Family Issues, 2004
In this article, the author uses data from the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth to examine the impact of childhood living arrangements on the characteristics of marriages formed by women between 1970 and 1989.The focus is on sociodemographic characteristics of marriage that may be taken to indicate a heightened risk of marital stress or…
Descriptors: Marriage, Females, Marital Instability, Children
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Choi, Heejeong; Marks, Nadine F. – Journal of Family Issues, 2006
Guided by a life course perspective, this study investigated whether the psychological consequences of transitioning into a caregiver role for a biological parent, parent-in-law, spouse, other kin, or nonkin among married adults might be moderated by marital role quality. Using longitudinal data from a national sample of 1,842 married adults aged…
Descriptors: Well Being, Marital Instability, Caregiver Role, Caregivers
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White, James M. – Journal of Family Issues, 1987
Developed interval scale to measure deviation from the normative sequencing of first job, marriage, and birth of first child. Scale scores had predictive utility for marital instability and work interruptions. Use of scale score as independent variable provided more information than that provided by Hogan's (1978) temporal sequence categories as…
Descriptors: Employment, Foreign Countries, Marital Instability, Marriage
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Glenn, Norval D. – Journal of Family Issues, 1981
Data from seven recent American national surveys found that persons remarried after divorce had rather high levels of reported well-being, but never-remarried women reported lower aggregate marital happiness than never-divorced married women or never-remarried men; the difference was not explained by race, age, or socioeconomic variables.…
Descriptors: Adults, Behavior Patterns, Divorce, Individual Characteristics
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Davis, Shannon N.; Greenstein, Theodore N. – Journal of Family Issues, 2004
A sample of ever-married women from the NLSY79 is analyzed to examine the effects of age at first marriage and gender ideology on the likelihood of experiencing marital disruption. The authors hypothesize that age at first marriage will have no effect on the likelihood of experiencing marital disruption for non-traditional women, but that there…
Descriptors: Marriage, Ideology, Females, Marital Instability
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Poortman, Anne-Rigt – Journal of Family Issues, 2005
This study examines whether the financial and time pressures associated with spouses' working lives play a role in the relation between work and divorce during the first years of marriage. Using retrospective data from the Netherlands, the results show that divorce is more likely when the husband works on average fewer hours and the wife more…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Spouses, Marriage, Financial Problems
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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
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Chafetz, Janet Saltzman – Journal of Family Issues, 1980
There are four strategies spouses may attempt to employ in cases of conflict: authority, control, influence, and manipulation. Rates of marital dissolution are a function of the relative equality between spouses in terms of the types of conflict-resolution strategies they are able to employ. (Author)
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Decision Making, Divorce, Industrialization
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Strazdins, Lyndall; Broom, Dorothy H. – Journal of Family Issues, 2004
Family members do work to meet people's emotional needs, improve their well-being, and maintain harmony. When emotional work is shared equally, both men and women have access to emotional resources in the family. However, like housework and child care, the distribution of emotional work is gendered. This study examines the psychological health…
Descriptors: Marriage, Females, Intimacy, Gender Differences
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Bell, David C.; And Others – Journal of Family Issues, 1982
Interviewed married couples (N=30) concerning strategies each spouse used to resolve conflicts. Findings show that husbands win most conflicts regardless of the strategies they or their wives employ. Suggests general background factors of the marriage shape outcomes but the process by which they are translated into outcomes is unclear. (Author)
Descriptors: Background, Conflict Resolution, Decision Making, Individual Power
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McNeal, Cosandra; Amato, Paul R. – Journal of Family Issues, 1998
The long-term consequences for children of marital violence were investigated using data from parents and their adult offspring over time. Marital violence was distinguished from other marital conflict. Outcome effects on young adults' lives of these and other predictor variables were investigated. Implications for counseling are discussed. (EMK)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adult Children, Conflict, Counseling
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