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Cohabitation eclipses divorce as key risk factor for children

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Aug 16 in Cohabitation 0 Comments

New research in America has claimed that the rise in the number of cohabiting households with children is linked to increased instability in children's lives, and to a range of negative outcomes for children.

 

The report was co-sponsored by the Institute for American Values and the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia. Its key findings include:

 

  • Divorces involving children have largely returned to pre-"divorce revolution" levels. Specifically, about 23% of children whose parents married in the early 1960s divorced by the time the children turned ten. More recently, slightly more than 23% of children whose parents married in 1997 divorced by the time the kids turned ten, down from a high of more than 27% in the mid-1970s.
  • Family instability for U.S. children overall continues to increase. The data shows that 66% of 16-year-olds were living with both parents in the early 1980s, compared to just 55% of 16-year-olds in the early 2000s.
  • Cohabitation is playing a growing role in children's lives. Children are now more likely to be exposed to a cohabiting union than to a parental divorce.
  • Children born to cohabiting unions are much more likely to experience a parental breakup compared to children born to married couples.

 

Tags: Cohabitation advice lawyers Dunfermline, Cohabitation advice Dunfermline, Divorce, Cohabitation

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