The Reproductive Context of Cohabitation in the United States: Recent Change and Variation in Contraceptive Use |
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Authors: | Megan M. Sweeney |
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Affiliation: | University of California, Los Angeles |
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Abstract: | Drawing on data from 2 waves of the National Survey of Family Growth (N = 11,065), the current research addressed 2 overarching questions about the reproductive context of cohabitation in the United States. First, did patterns of contraceptive use among cohabitors change during the last 2 decades of the 20th century? Second, did patterns of contraceptive use among cohabiting women tend to vary by education or race/ethnicity? Results point to a growing resemblance between never‐married cohabiting women and those in first marriages in the likelihood of using a “very effective” contraceptive method and suggest that cohabitation is most “marriage like” with respect to reproductive behavior among the least educated. |
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Keywords: | cohabitation contraception marriage social change social trends U.S. families |
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