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https://doi.org/10.4054/DemRes.2014.30.54
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Attitudes on marriage and new relationships: cross-national evidence on the deinstitutionalization of marriage
[journal article]
Abstract Background: Consistent with the deinstitutionalization-of-marriage thesis, studies report a decline in support for marital conventions and increased approval of other relationship types. Generalizations are limited by the lack of cross-national research for a broad domain of attitudes on marriage an... view more
Background: Consistent with the deinstitutionalization-of-marriage thesis, studies report a decline in support for marital conventions and increased approval of other relationship types. Generalizations are limited by the lack of cross-national research for a broad domain of attitudes on marriage and alternative arrangements, and by the lack of consensus on what counts as evidence. Objective: Acknowledging the conceptual distinction between expectations for behavior inside and outside marriage, we address the deinstitutionalization debate by testing whether support for marital conventions has declined for a range of attitudes across countries. Methods: Based on eleven International Social Survey Program items replicated between the late 1980s and the 2000s, OLS regressions evaluate attitude changes in up to 21 countries. Results: Consistent with the deinstitutionalization argument, disapproval declined for marital alternatives (cohabitation, unmarried parents, premarital and same-sex sex). For attitudes on the behavior of married people and the nature of marriage the results are mixed: despite a shift away from gender specialization, disapproval of extramarital sex increased over time. On most items, most countries changed as predicted by the deinstitutionalization thesis. Conclusions: Attitude changes on 'new relationships' and marital alternatives are compatible with the deinstitutionalization of marriage. Beliefs arguably more central to the marital institution do not conform as neatly to this thesis. Because results are sensitive to the indicators used, the deinstitutionalization of marriage argument merits greater empirical and conceptual attention.... view less
Keywords
marriage; partnership; family structure; domestic partnership; same-sex cohabitation; single parent; public opinion; attitude change; international comparison
Classification
Family Sociology, Sociology of Sexual Behavior
Free Keywords
cohabitation; cross-national comparison; deinstitutionalization of marriage; sexual intercourse
Document language
English
Publication Year
2014
Page/Pages
p. 1495-1526
Journal
Demographic Research, 30 (2014)
ISSN
1435-9871
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed