| Literature DB >> 33814657 |
Wendy D Manning1, Pamela J Smock2, Marshal Neal Fettro1.
Abstract
Cohabitation has surpassed marriage as the most common union experience in young adulthood. We capitalize on a new opportunity to examine both marital and cohabitation expectations among young single women in recently collected, nationally representative data (National Survey of Family Growth 2011-2015) (n=1,467). In the U.S. there appears to be a 'stalled' Second Demographic Transition as single young adult (ages 18-24) women have stronger expectations to marry than cohabit and the vast majority expects to, or has, already married. Among young women expecting to marry, the majority (68%) expect to cohabit with their future spouse but about one-third expect to follow a traditional relationship pathway into marriage (to marry without cohabiting first). In addition, women from disadvantaged backgrounds report the lowest expectations to marry, but there is no education gradient in expectations to cohabit. Marriage expectations follow a "diverging destinies" pattern, which stresses a growing educational divide, but this is not the case for cohabitation expectations. Our results, based on recently collected data, provide insight into the contemporary context of union formation decision-making for the millennial generation.Entities:
Keywords: cohabitation; diverging destinies; marriage; millennials; second demographic transition; young adulthood
Year: 2019 PMID: 33814657 PMCID: PMC8014961 DOI: 10.1007/s11113-018-09509-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Popul Res Policy Rev ISSN: 0167-5923