One parent or two? The intertwining of American marriage and fertility patterns |
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Authors: | Ronald R. Rindfuss Jo Ann Jones |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Sociology, CB No. 3210, Hamilton Hall, University of North Carolina, 27514 Chapel Hill, North Carolina |
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Abstract: | Marriage and fertility in the United States have become less firmly entwined as more women bear children without marrying and more couples with children divorce. Today a sizeable number of children are expected to spend a portion of their childhood in one-parent households. Despite the trends in illegitimacy and divorce, the actual effect of out-of-wedlock childbearing on the living arrangements of children has not been fully explicated. Using the National Survey of Family Growth Cycle III, this paper estimates the probability that children aged 0–13 in 1982 are living in two-parent households, controlling for their mothers' marital statuses at their births. We find that marital status at birth is an important predictor of household structure at later ages for both white and black populations; however, the childhood environment is actually quite elastic as women marry, divorce, remarry, and redivorce. |
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Keywords: | female-headed families out-of-wedlock childbearing divorce remarriage |
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