| Literature DB >> 28275287 |
David M Wright1, Michael Rosato2, Dermot O'Reilly1.
Abstract
Heterogamous marriages, in which partners have dissimilar attributes (e.g. by socio-economic status or ethnicity), are often at elevated risk of dissolution. We investigated the influences of heterogamy by religion and area of residence on risk of marital dissolution in Northern Ireland, a country with a history of conflict and residential segregation along Catholic-Protestant lines. We expected Catholic-Protestant marriages to have elevated risks of dissolution, especially in areas with high concentrations of a single religious group where opposition to intermarriage was expected to be high. We estimated risks of marital dissolution from 2001 to 2011 for 19,791 couples drawn from the Northern Ireland Longitudinal Study (a record linkage study), adjusting for a range of compositional and contextual factors using multilevel logistic regression. Dissolution risk decreased with increasing age and higher socio-economic status. Catholic-Protestant marriages were rare (5.9 % of the sample) and were at increased risk of dissolution relative to homogamous marriages. We found no association between local population composition and dissolution risk for Catholic-Protestant couples, indicating that partner and household characteristics may have a greater influence on dissolution risk than the wider community.Entities:
Keywords: Heterogamy; Longitudinal study; Marital dissolution; Religion; Segregation
Year: 2016 PMID: 28275287 PMCID: PMC5318477 DOI: 10.1007/s10680-016-9398-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Popul ISSN: 0168-6577
Baseline characteristics of married people in Northern Ireland at the 2001 Census by union type
| Protestant–Protestant | Catholic–Catholic | Catholic–Protestant | Other | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cohort (individuals) | 21,700 | 14,592 | 2352 | 938 |
| Age | ||||
| [16,35) | 17.92 | 20.03 | 27.17 | 33.58 |
| [35,50) | 39.70 | 46.13 | 49.02 | 43.71 |
| [50,75) | 42.39 | 33.83 | 23.81 | 22.71 |
| Economic activity | ||||
| Employed | 68.69 | 63.69 | 75.85 | 73.67 |
| Inactive | 31.31 | 36.31 | 24.15 | 26.33 |
| Higher education | ||||
| No degree | 82.72 | 82.26 | 76.28 | 69.83 |
| Degree | 17.28 | 17.74 | 23.72 | 30.17 |
| Country of birth | ||||
| Northern Ireland | 92.68 | 90.54 | 86.69 | 66.74 |
| Other | 7.32 | 9.46 | 13.31 | 33.26 |
| Marital status | ||||
| Both partners first marriage | 90.59 | 96.74 | 83.59 | 85.71 |
| At least one partner previously married | 9.41 | 3.26 | 16.41 | 14.29 |
| Housing tenure | ||||
| Owner occupied | 90.20 | 87.92 | 89.03 | 91.47 |
| Social rented | 6.58 | 9.14 | 7.14 | 4.69 |
| Private rented | 3.22 | 2.93 | 3.83 | 3.84 |
| Children aged 5+ | ||||
| No | 61.08 | 46.88 | 53.91 | 58.64 |
| Yes | 38.92 | 53.12 | 46.09 | 41.36 |
| Children aged <5 | ||||
| No | 94.48 | 88.93 | 91.50 | 92.11 |
| Yes | 5.52 | 11.07 | 8.50 | 7.89 |
| Rurality | ||||
| Rural | 33.82 | 39.27 | 25.26 | 35.18 |
| Intermediate | 30.39 | 39.62 | 39.88 | 17.91 |
| Urban | 35.79 | 21.11 | 34.86 | 46.91 |
Percentage of individuals in each cohort at baseline given for categorical variables
Number of married couples by religious affiliation in Northern Ireland, 2001, and proportion of marriages dissolved during the subsequent decade
| Protestant–Protestant | Catholic–Catholic | Catholic–Protestant | Other | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Couples | 10,850 | 7296 | 1176 | 469 |
| Both partners reporting current religion (%) | 88.0 | 95.5 | 49.7 | 11.5 |
| Dissolved (%) | 11.4 | 13.0 | 18.4 | 18.6 |
Proportion of couples in which both partners reported current religion (as opposed to religion brought up in)
Effect of compositional and contextual factors on risk of marital dissolution in Northern Ireland, 2001–2011
| Union type | Unadjusted | Adjusteda | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR | 95 %CI | OR | 95 % CI | |
| Marital status | ||||
| Both partners first marriage | 1.00 | |||
| At least one partner previously married | 1.69 | (1.39, 1.84) | 1.54 | (1.33, 1.79) |
| Age | ||||
| [16,35)–[16,35) | 1.65 | (1.47, 1.84) | 1.95 | (1.72, 2.21) |
| [16,35)–[35,50) | 1.50 | (1.30, 1.74) | 1.53 | (1.32, 1.77) |
| [16,35)–[50,75) | 1.03 | (0.30, 3.51) | 0.69 | (0.20, 2.37) |
| [35,50)–[35,50) | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| [35,50)–[50,75) | 0.82 | (0.69, 0.97) | 0.78 | (0.65, 0.93) |
| [50,75)–[50,75) | 0.50 | (0.45, 0.56) | 0.53 | (0.46, 0.61) |
| Economic activity | ||||
| Employed–employed | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Employed–inactive | 0.98 | (0.89, 1.08) | 1.04 | (0.94, 1.16) |
| Inactive–inactive | 1.05 | (0.94, 1.18) | 1.44 | (1.25, 1.65) |
| Higher education | ||||
| No degree–no degree | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Degree–degree | 0.68 | (0.58, 0.80) | 0.61 | (0.52, 0.73) |
| Degree–no degree | 0.82 | (0.73, 0.93) | 0.80 | (0.71, 0.90) |
| Country of birth | ||||
| NI–NI | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| NI–other | 1.18 | (1.05, 1.33) | 1.13 | (1.00, 1.27) |
| Other–other | 1.48 | (1.13, 1.93) | 1.33 | (1.00, 1.77) |
| Children | ||||
| None | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Children aged 5+ | 1.48 | (1.36, 1.61) | 1.31 | (1.18, 1.46) |
| Children aged <5 | 1.56 | (1.35, 1.79) | 1.00 | (0.86, 1.16) |
| Housing tenure | ||||
| Owner occupied | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Social rented | 1.84 | (1.61, 2.11) | 1.45 | (1.25, 1.69) |
| Private rented | 1.88 | (1.54, 2.31) | 1.51 | (1.22, 1.86) |
| Rurality | ||||
| Rural | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| Intermediate | 1.24 | (1.11, 1.38) | 1.18 | (1.06, 1.31) |
| Urban | 1.23 | (1.10, 1.37) | 1.27 | (1.13, 1.41) |
Estimated dissolution risk by religion for adjusted model (M4) given in Table 4
NI Northern Ireland
aModel adjusted for religion, age, economic activity, marital status, education, housing tenure, country of birth, presence of dependent children and rurality
Estimated relative risk of dissolution for each union type (ORs and 95 % CIs) in unadjusted and adjusted models
| Model | Description | Protestant–Protestant | Catholic–Catholic | Catholic–Protestant | Other | AIC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M1 | Unadjusted | 1.00 | 1.16 (1.06, 1.28) | 1.75 (1.49, 2.06) | 1.78 (1.40, 2.26) | 14,914 |
| M2 | +Age | 1.00 | 1.10 (1.00, 1.21) | 1.50 (1.28, 1.77) | 1.46 (1.15, 1.87) | 14,555 |
| M3 | +Age + employment + education + tenure | 1.00 | 1.06 (0.96, 1.16) | 1.54 (1.31, 1.81) | 1.54 (1.20, 1.97) | 14,394 |
| M4 | Fully adjusteda | 1.00 | 1.09 (0.99, 1.20) | 1.47 (1.25, 1.73) | 1.37 (1.06, 1.77) | 14,323 |
aAdjusted for age, economic activity, marital status, education, housing tenure, country of birth, presence of dependent children and rurality
Comparison of multiple linear regression models of marital dissolution risk of couples in Northern Ireland, 2001–2011
| Model | Description | AIC | d | LRT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||||
| M4 | Base | 14,323 | 23 | ||
| M5 | +Linear | 14,325 | 24 | 0.095 | 0.758 |
| M6 | +Linear + quadratic | 14,324 | 25 | 2.319 | 0.128 |
| M7 | +Linear + quadratic +cubic | 14,326 | 26 | 0.434 | 0.519 |
Base model (M4) is adjusted for age, economic activity, marital status (first or subsequent marriage), education, country of birth, presence of young (<5 years) and older dependent children, housing tenure, settlement type (urban/rural/intermediate) and area of residence (Super Output Area). Subsequent models include polynomial terms related to the religious composition of the area of residence (proportion Catholic) of increasing degree. Model fit assessed using Akaike’s Information Criterion and likelihood ratio tests in comparison with base model