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The Effects of Family Structure of Origin on Offspring Cohabitation Duration
Authors:Nicholas H. Wolfinger
Affiliation:Assistant professor in the Department of Family and Consumer Studies at the University of Utah. His interests include divorce, social demography, and research methods. His book on intergenerational transmission of divorce will be published by Stanford University Press.
Abstract:This study uses data from both waves of the National Survey of Families and Households to examine the effects of family structure of origin on offspring's cohabiting unions. Parental divorce substantially decreases the likelihood that these relationships end in marriage, but this effect is almost completely ameliorated by parental remarriage. Parental divorce also increases the chances that a cohabiting relationship will break up, but the effect is much smaller than the impact of parental divorce on marital stability. I explain this discrepancy by showing that cohabitation is inherently unstable compared to marriage. In a context of instability, family structure of origin makes less difference than it does in marriage.
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