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Saturday, 11 August 2012

Evolution Of Marriage

 
Evolution Of Marriage – According to the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth, Marriage, current divorce rate 2012, one in five marriages will end in five years, and one in three will last less than 10 years.  Read through to see more interesting facts we found from sources like the US Census Bureau, the National Center for Health Statistics and the Pew Research Center that show how the institution of marriage is viewed today.




 
Marriage longevity statistics
Fact: Today, only half of American adults are married, compared with 78 percent in 1950.

Why: According to researchers, marriage meant stability for past generations. Those growing up during the Depression searched high and low for a predictable lifestyle as adults during the 1940s and ’50s, when marriage rates became drastically high. annette bening and warren beatty, kathlyn beatty announcement,
 
Median age at first marriage
Facts:
  • According to the 2010 US Census, only one-fifth of adults below age 30 are married today, compared with almost 60 percent in 1960.
  • Couples are waiting longer to marry: In 2010, the national average age of brides marrying for the first time is 26.5; for grooms, it’s 28.7.
Why: “The sexual revolution, the result of safe and reliable birth control, clearly played a part in that,” researchers say. chelsea clinton and mark mezvinsky, chelsea clinton 30 married
 
Education marriage gap
Facts:
  • “Two-thirds of adults with college degrees get married, compared with less than half of people with  only high school diplomas,” the Pew Research Center reported.
  • People without college degrees are more likely to divorce.
Why: A higher degree often translates to better self-awareness, real-world experience and more focus placed on career development. In other words, people who feel fulfilled on their own may feel better fulfilled in their relationships. barack and michelle obama
 
Career marriage
Fact: “The people who can get good jobs are marrying and staying together,” said Andrew Cherlin, a sociology professor at Johns Hopkins University. “Those are the college-educated people. Marriage is reflecting the socioeconomic polarization in society.”

Why: Tradition. Toby Lewis, a 39-year-old newspaper editor, said, “I wanted to wait for the right person.  I know that sounds like a cliché answer, but I only want to get married once. I’m a traditional guy. I believe a marriage should be a lifetime commitment.”
 
Income and marriage statistics
Fact: During the Great Depression, the marriage rate declined to 7.9 per 1,000. After World War II, jobs were plentiful and marriages boomed.

Why: “More people don’t feel able to afford being married, both financially and socially,” said Todd Migliaccio, a Sacramento State associate sociology professor. “They see marriage as something to do when they’re more stable.” mark zuckerberg net worth 2012, Mark Zuckerberg wife,
 
Statistics same-sex households
Fact: According to the 2010 US Census, same-sex unmarried partner households accounted for 0.6 percent of all households in the United States, a 50 percent increase from the 2000 US Census report.

Why: With an increased awareness of same-sex marriage and household rights, it’s safe to say that same-sex couples are more likely to live openly than in the past. ellen degeneres and portia de rossi,
 
Marriage and cohabitation
Fact: More than 60 percent of couples today live together before marriage. According to the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth, half of those couples marry within three years.

Why: Education, career and finance factors cause couples to tread lightly before taking the plunge. Cohabitating allows individuals to test the waters before making a commitment. goldie hawn and kurt russell,
 
Single parent
Fact: 41 percent of children are born to single parents.
Why: With divorce rates steady and alternative methods of becoming a parent on the rise, society’s stigma of single parenting is slowly melting away.
 
Having kids before marriage
Fact: According to the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth, the majority of children born to unmarried women in the early part of this decade were to mothers living with the child’s father. Twenty years prior, only one third of births to unmarried women were to couples living together.

Why: A reflection of society’s gradual open-mindedness, opposite- and same-sex couples are opting for alternative ways to raise their families, such as living together and having kids before exchanging vows. angelina jolie and brad pitt, brad and angelina’s kids ask,