More and more people enter multiple unions during their lives, and then they may choose to either cohabit or marry. We examine the implications of this diversity in partnership trajectories by assessing dissolution risks in first and higher order marital and cohabiting unions. We use recent Norwegian survey data that contain complete retrospective union histories. We find that, when selectivity is accounted for, higher-order unions are not less stable than first unions. When dissolution risks for all possible partnership trajectories are compared, we find that former cohabitants who cohabit in a second union are as likely to break up as they were in their first cohabiting union. As soon as they enter marriage in their second unions, however...
This study describes the association between having children and the risk of union disruption, and w...
Unions of individuals with different birth orders have been suggested to be more stable than those o...
Research has shown considerable municipal-level variation in divorce rates within countries. Given t...
More and more people enter multiple unions during their lives, and then they may choose to either co...
Cohabitors and married people who cohabited before marriage have higher risks of union dissolution t...
We examine the patterns of partnership behaviour following first union dissolution analysing the ind...
The family life courses of immigrants and their descendants, particularly intermarriage and the timi...
Using retrospective data from the survey Divorce in the Netherlands 1998, I examine the influence of...
This study examines the risk of separation over union duration. Previous research reports a rising-f...
This paper investigates whether the determinants of first marriage dissolution differ from determina...
In this paper the connection between exogamy and partnership dissolution is analyzed using individua...
The cohabitation effect has been identified as a factor in former cohabitors’ increased marital inst...
influence of the relationship career on chances of union formation. Frailty models accounting for un...
The increasing proportion of ethnic minorities in Britain has been paralleled by an increase in the ...
This study describes the association between having children and the risk of union disruption, and w...
Unions of individuals with different birth orders have been suggested to be more stable than those o...
Research has shown considerable municipal-level variation in divorce rates within countries. Given t...
More and more people enter multiple unions during their lives, and then they may choose to either co...
Cohabitors and married people who cohabited before marriage have higher risks of union dissolution t...
We examine the patterns of partnership behaviour following first union dissolution analysing the ind...
The family life courses of immigrants and their descendants, particularly intermarriage and the timi...
Using retrospective data from the survey Divorce in the Netherlands 1998, I examine the influence of...
This study examines the risk of separation over union duration. Previous research reports a rising-f...
This paper investigates whether the determinants of first marriage dissolution differ from determina...
In this paper the connection between exogamy and partnership dissolution is analyzed using individua...
The cohabitation effect has been identified as a factor in former cohabitors’ increased marital inst...
influence of the relationship career on chances of union formation. Frailty models accounting for un...
The increasing proportion of ethnic minorities in Britain has been paralleled by an increase in the ...
This study describes the association between having children and the risk of union disruption, and w...
Unions of individuals with different birth orders have been suggested to be more stable than those o...
Research has shown considerable municipal-level variation in divorce rates within countries. Given t...