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Partnership
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Journal Article
Demography (2018) 55 (6): 2299–2320.
Published: 01 November 2018
...Shuai Chen; Jan C. van Ours Abstract We analyze Dutch panel data to investigate whether partnership has a causal effect on subjective well-being. As in previous studies, we find that, on average, being in a partnership improves well-being. Well-being gains of marriage are larger than those...
FIGURES
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (2016) 53 (3): 777–804.
Published: 17 May 2016
... demonstrated empirically for multiple aspects of fertility and partnership histories, including timing of births and marriage, parity, and the presence and timing of a marital disruption. Most previous studies have, however, addressed particular aspects of fertility or partnership histories singly. We build...
FIGURES
| View All (4)
Journal Article
Demography (2024) 61 (1): 189–207.
Published: 01 February 2024
... more pronounced. Some researchers have argued that partnered individuals have better health and lower mortality because a partnership offers protective effects (protection); others have posited that partnered people have better health and lower mortality because healthy persons are more likely to form...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (2024) 61 (1): 115–140.
Published: 01 February 2024
... and increasing diversity in sexual identities. Corresponding author: [email protected] Copyright © 2024 The Authors 2024 Sexual identity Gender Partnership Caregiving Roughly one in five U.S. adults provide unpaid care—the unpaid regular care or assistance given to family...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Demography (2008) 45 (3): 573–590.
Published: 01 August 2008
...Christopher Carpenter; Gary J. Gates Abstract Much recent research on sexual minorities has used couples-based samples, which—by construction—provide no information on nonpartnered individuals. We present the first systematic empirical analysis of partnership and cohabitation...
Journal Article
Demography (2012) 49 (3): 1075–1101.
Published: 03 June 2012
... the women in their community ( monopolizing polygynists ). We find evidence for some of these mechanisms, and together they support the proposition that polygynous marriage systems impede the spread of HIV. We relate these results to the debate about partnership concurrency as a primary behavioral driver...
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Journal Article
Demography (2015) 52 (4): 1243–1268.
Published: 01 July 2015
... and the rights bundled therein. In this article, using Swedish longitudinal register data covering 1994–2007, we study the impact of the extension of rights to same-sex couples on labor earnings and fertility. In 1994, registered partnership for same-sex couples was introduced, which conferred almost all rights...
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in Just Like in Their Home Country? A Multinational Perspective on Living Arrangements of Older Immigrants in the United States
> Demography
Published: 15 August 2017
Fig. 1 Predicted proportions in different living arrangements by partnership status: Mexicans aged 60 or older residing in the United States and Mexico. The predicted values are estimated from the multinomial logistic regression models in Table 2 adjusted for age, sex, education, and year
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in Just Like in Their Home Country? A Multinational Perspective on Living Arrangements of Older Immigrants in the United States
> Demography
Published: 15 August 2017
Fig. 2 Predicted proportions in different living arrangements by partnership status: Dominicans aged 60 or older residing in the United States and Dominican Republic. The predicted values are estimated from the multinomial logistic regression models in Table 3 adjusted for age, sex, education
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in Just Like in Their Home Country? A Multinational Perspective on Living Arrangements of Older Immigrants in the United States
> Demography
Published: 15 August 2017
Fig. 3 Predicted proportions in different living arrangements by partnership status: Vietnamese age 60+ residing in the United States and Vietnam. The predicted values are estimated from the multinomial logistic regression models in Table 4 adjusted for age, sex, education, and year of survey
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in Divorce, Separation, and Housing Changes: A Multiprocess Analysis of Longitudinal Data from England and Wales
> Demography
Published: 10 January 2018
Fig. 1 Relative risks of moving to different types of housing by partnership status (Model 1) for women (panel a) and men (panel b). Whiskers indicate 95 % confidence intervals compared with the reference category (moves to semidetached house among married women (panel a) and men (panel b
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in Divorce, Separation, and Housing Changes: A Multiprocess Analysis of Longitudinal Data from England and Wales
> Demography
Published: 10 January 2018
Fig. 2 Relative risks of moving to different types of housing by partnership status distinguishing between moves due to separation (0–4 months after separation) and moves of separated individuals (5 or more months after separation) (Model 2) for women (panel a) and men (panel b). Whiskers
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in Divorce, Separation, and Housing Changes: A Multiprocess Analysis of Longitudinal Data from England and Wales
> Demography
Published: 10 January 2018
Fig. 3 Relative risks of moving to different types of housing by partnership status distinguishing between those who moved 5 or more months after separation by order of move (Model 3) for women (panel a) and men (panel b). Whiskers indicate 95 % confidence intervals compared with the reference
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in Divorce, Separation, and Housing Changes: A Multiprocess Analysis of Longitudinal Data from England and Wales
> Demography
Published: 10 January 2018
Fig. 4 Relative risks of moving to different types of housing by partnership status distinguishing between those who moved 5 or more months after separation by previous residential history (Model 4) for women (panel a) and men (panel b). Whiskers indicate 95 % confidence intervals compared
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in Who Cares? Unpaid Caregiving by Sexual Identity, Gender, and Partnership Status Among U.S. Adults
> Demography
Published: 01 February 2024
Fig. 2 Predicted probability of providing care by sexual identity and partnership status, stratified by gender. Predicted probabilities of caregiving status are adjusted for all sociodemographic, socioeconomic, and health measures listed in Table 2 , as well as the state and year
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in The Direct Effects of Legal Same-Sex Marriage in the United States: Evidence From Massachusetts
> Demography
Published: 08 September 2020
Fig. 2 Trends in marriage and partnership in Massachusetts among lesbians
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in The Direct Effects of Legal Same-Sex Marriage in the United States: Evidence From Massachusetts
> Demography
Published: 08 September 2020
Fig. 3 Trends in marriage and partnership in Massachusetts among gay men
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in Subjective Well-being and Partnership Dynamics: Are Same-Sex Relationships Different?
> Demography
Published: 01 November 2018
Fig. 1 Well-being and partnership
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Journal Article
Demography (2014) 51 (2): 485–508.
Published: 08 January 2014
... survey-based union and birth histories in Australia and the United States and data from national population registers in Norway and Sweden to estimate the likelihood of experiencing childbearing across partnerships at any point in the childbearing career. We find that births with new partners constitute...
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Published: 03 June 2012
Fig. 4 The prevalence of nonmarital partnerships in the last 12 months (left), and its association with polygyny status (right). The sample for this analysis is restricted to married men and women. The DHS for Lesotho does not allow us to distinguish between women in polygynous and monogamous
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