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Marriage, Divorce, Remarriage explores Americans' ambivalence toward marriage: we continue to value it highly, but we also marry later, dissolve the marriages we make more readily, and are more reluctant to remarry than ever before. In a revision and enlargement, Andrew Cherlin examines the course of family life in America, including cohabitation, marriage, divorce and remarriage, from the end of World War II through the early 1990s. He also assesses the causes and consequences of these trends, ranging from the anomaly of the 1950s, when marriage rose, divorce declined, and couples had large families, to the rapid increase in cohabitation and single life. For this edition, Cherlin has updated all of the graphs and tables, and presented new findings on cohabitation and its relationship to marriage. He has also completely rewritten the chapter on black-white differences. It is now an essay on one of the most troubling public policy issues: the relations among race, poverty, and marriage. And in a new chapter, he explores the meaning of marriage in our society.
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Rueschemeyer et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a11bf5e0b2fd5f9c6c8ff3f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/2578169
Marilyn Rueschemeyer
Andrew J. Cherlin
Johns Hopkins University
Social Forces
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