Divorce Statistics
(noun)
Quantitative measures of marriage and marital dissolution.
Examples of Divorce Statistics in the following topics:
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Statistical Trends in Divorce
- Divorce statistics vary across the world, but on average, first marriages that end in divorce last about eight years.
- Divorce statistics vary across the world.
- The National Center for Health Statistics reports that from 1975 to 1988, in families with children present, wives file for divorce in approximately two-thirds of cases.
- In Australia, nearly every third marriage ends in divorce.
- Since then, both the number of divorces and the divorce rate have declined for six years straight.
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Family Structures
- Statistics show that there are 1,300 new stepfamilies forming every day.
- Over half of American families are remarried, that is 75% of marriages ending in divorce, remarry.
- Statistics show that there are 1,300 new stepfamilies forming every day.
- Statistics show that there are 1,300 new step families forming every day.
- Analyze the statistical data regarding types of family composition and living arrangements
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Factors Associated with Divorce
- Factors that may lead marriages to end in divorce are infidelity, adultery domestic violence, midlife crises, inexperience, and addictions.
- The age at which a person gets married is also believed to influence the likelihood of divorce.
- This graph illustrates marriage and divorce rates in the U.S. 1990-2007.
- Source: Statistical Abstract, 2009.
- Discuss five factors that may lead marriages to end in divorce
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Divorce and Its Legal Ramifications
- Under a no-fault divorce system, divorce requires no allegation or proof of fault of either party.
- Though divorce laws vary among jurisdictions, there are two basic approaches to divorce: fault based, and no-fault based.
- Under a no-fault divorce system, divorce requires no allegation or proof of fault of either party.
- These are termed uncontested divorces.
- Finally, divorce mediation is an alternative to traditional divorce litigation.
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Children of Divorce and Impact of Divorce
- Sociologists and psychologists have found that the effects of divorce heavily depend on the child's age at the time the divorce occurs.
- Children of divorced parents are reported to have a higher chance of behavioral problems than those of non-divorced parents.
- Sociologists and psychologists have conducted research that shows the effects of divorce heavily depend on the child's age at the time the divorce occurs.
- Although divorce may be beneficial in some instances, high-conflict divorce (especially during transition periods) is harmful to children.
- Compare and contrast the effects of divorce on infants and adolescents
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Replacing Family Functions
- This statistic has lowered since 1991, when married and common law couples raising children under the age of 25 represented 49% of all Canadian families.
- The dominant caregiver is the parent with whom the children reside the majority of the time; if the parents are separated or divorced, children live with their custodial parent and have visitation with their noncustodial parent.
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The Family Life Cycle
- Most researchers think that women are disadvantaged by the ease of divorce.
- Divorce is a negotiating tool for women who seek change in their relationships.
- Another factor that contributes to high divorce rates is the change in laws that made divorce easier in the 1970s in the U.S.
- Finally, there is a social-psychological component to divorce as well.
- Divorce and widowhood carry with them the burden of reduced health.
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Ideal vs. Real Culture
- Many spouses have affairs or divorce.
- In reality, many marriages are based on things other than romantic love (such as money, convenience, or social expectation), and many end in divorce.
- In ideal culture, marriage is forever, but in real culture, many marriages end in divorce.
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New Developments in Families
- living with someone before marriage as a way to avoid divorce
- Early cohabitors also have a great potential for divorce.
- There is, however, data on marital dissolution rates (i.e., divorce) in other countries where same-sex marriage has been legally allowed for a longer period of time.
- while divorce rates are higher for couples that marry younger generally (see discussion of divorce above), the divorce rate is slightly higher for same-sex couples than heterosexual couples
- female same-sex couples are more likely to divorce than are male same-sex couples
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Theoretical Perspectives on Childhood Socialization
- Microsystems, and therefore mesosystems and exosystems, are impossible to understand when divorced from their macrosystemic context.
- For example, the impact of divorces on children has varied over history.
- When divorce was more culturally stigmatized, it had a different effect on children than today, when many children have divorced parents.