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Marital separation and divorce

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Longitudinal study of couples over a 24 year period. ... 1/3 divorced but 'many unhappy couples remained married long enough to outgrow ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Marital separation and divorce


1
Marital separation and divorce
  • Is marriage 1. a voluntary contract that can be
    ended by either partner 2. a lifetime commitment
    til death do us part?
  • (How did the women in Promises I Can Keep see
    it?)
  • Gallup poll Do you believe that an unhappy
    marriage should be maintained for the sake of the
    children?

2
Divorce Trends and Comparisons
  • U.S. Rates (why measure divorce this way?)
  • 1960 9 per 1000 married women
  • 1970 15
  • 1980 23
  • 1990 21
  • 2000 19
  • 2005 16

3
Why the rapid increase?
  • Legal changes no fault marriage
  • Changing expectations best friend
  • Cultural emphasis self-fulfillment
    (Functionalism and institutionsdoes happiness
    matter to society?)
  • Womens employment trends
  • Mens employment trends

4
Correlates of Divorce
  • Family income
  • Education
  • Race/ethnicity
  • Age at first marriage!
  • Who initiates divorce? 2/3-3/4 initiated by the
    wife? Ideas about why?

5
Our class divorce/split
6
Our class/parents remarry?
7
Should the laws be changed to make divorce more
difficult?
  • The General Social Survey
  • Divkids, divnow, divifkid,
  • divlaw

8
How serious are the issues that usually
precipitate a divorce?
  • Arlene Skolnick Grounds for Marriage, from
    Family in Transition, 2005. Longitudinal study of
    couples over a 24 year period.
  • Each spouse was interviewed in 1958(age 30 or 37)
    and again in 1970 and 1982
  • most striking impression from following these
    marriages through long periods of time is the
    great potential for change in human
    relationships.
  • Almost 1/3 divorced but many unhappy couples
    remained married long enough to outgrow their
    earlier difficulties.

9
Robert Weis Marital Separation, 1977
  • Research basis Seminar for the separated at
    Harvard
  • Common Themes wrong from the start, wanting
    different things, serious failings in spouse
    (including mental illness), sexual infidelity
  • Impact on self (symbolic interaction)
  • Betrayal and duplicity
  • Direct attacks on self
  • Obsessive review
  • Accounts

10
Diane Vaughn, Uncoupling, 1986
  • Research basis Interviews with 103 divorced or
    separated men or women
  • Her own divorce Rather than an abrupt ending,
    ours appeared in retrospect to have been a
    gradual transition. Long before we physically
    separated, we had been separating
    sociallydeveloping separate friends,
    experiences, and futures

11
Vaughn common patterns
  • 1. Harboring secret unhappiness
  • 2. Making the initial disclosure
  • 3. Pursuing outside involvements
  • 4. Accentuating the negative
  • 5. Deciding to separate
  • 6. Going public

12
Wallerstein and Blakeslee Second Chances
  • Began in 1971, with 60 families, including 131
    children, aged 2-18
  • Recruited by advertisements in newspapers
  • More educated, more affluent, more white than
    population as a whole
  • In early stages of divorce
  • Common wisdom at the time healthy people would
    work through this crisis in six months or a year
    and get on with their lives

13
Second Chances for Adults
  • Few adults anticipate accurately how arduous and
    depleting divorce will be
  • At five year point, half of men and 2/3 of women
    content with quality of their lives but half of
    men and 1/3 of women felt stalled or even more
    unhappy than during failed marriage
  • At ten-year point, half of women and 1/3 of men
    still intensely angry with ex-spouse

14
Parents and kids
  • Unlike most crises, many of these parents were
    unable to protect their kids first in this
    crisis.
  • By ten-year point, 60 of the children over 18
    seemed to be on a downward trajectory (in terms
    of education and social class) compared with
    their fathers

15
Kids at the ten-year point
  • By 10-year point, many kids defining divorce as
    formative experience
  • 35 reporting bad relationships with both their
    parents
  • Sleeper effect kids (especially girls) who
    seemed to be doing well at first but had a very
    hard time later often beset with anxieties
    about relationships

16
Video Children of Divorce
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