Sunday, November 21, 2010

Matrimony is outdated - study implies changing U.S.

Marriage research hints at possible obsolescence

Marriage can be defined in a variety of ways. Yet regardless of whether it is an emotional, economic or statutory arrangement, it may be almost obsolete in The United States, indicates the Pew Research Center. The Associated Press accounts that not only are separation and divorce figures nevertheless high, but more kids than ever are living in single parent families where that parent is divorced, separated or never married.

Is a family members only inside of marriage?

The Pew group research is in conjunction with Time magazine here. They both show that matrimony has become not nearly as essential while the American family members hardly have a real classification anymore. The sea change has reportedly prompted the Census Bureau to adopt broader definitions of exactly what constitutes a family member, particularly where matters of poverty and unmarried couples are concerned.

The Pew group explains that matrimony isn't exactly what a family member has to get anymore. Dr. Andrew Cherlin, sociology and public policy professor at Johns Hopkins University, told the AP that "Now you will find several ways to have a successful family member’s life and more people accept them.”

Details about the new American families

29 percent of kids are in homes with unwed or no longer married parents that are either, single or two parents, the Pew matrimony and family study explains. In 1960, there were five times less that many family members doing that. The number of Pew respondents who think that marriage is becoming unimportant was 39 percent. In 1978, just 28 percent of Americans felt that way. Considering the United States of America census data from September 2010 – where matrimony was down to an all-time low of 52 percent of adults 18 and older – it becomes clear the Pew findings are no coincidence.

Mercy, mercy me (the economic climate)

A family member is considered a married couple by almost everyone. However, only 60 percent of individuals say that same-sex couples with children are considered families and 80 percent of people who responded said that "an unmarried opposite-sex couple with kids or a single parent" was a family. There has been a huge role of the economic climate in this. Unmarried cohabitation has been especially effected. Just since last year there has been a huge increase. This means that an opposite-sex unmarried couple has gone up 13 percent. Due to joblessness and benefits like health insurance becoming more accessible to all "alternative" families, marriage has gone down making long-term matrimony commitments unlikely.

Details from

Newser

newser.com/article/d9jignp00/at-the-thanksgiving-table-fewer-children-raised-by-married-parents-as-nation-redefines-family.html

New Yorkers’ views of marriage

youtube.com/watch?v=7AdLoyH7ZRI



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