BACKGROUND A well-documented association exists between age at marriage and the risk of divorce. However, substantial gaps in our knowledge and understanding of ist origins, nature, and implications still exist. OBJECTIVE This article documents the relationship between women's ages at first marriage and marriage cohort divorce rates, assessing the importance of relative ages at marriage (based on rankings within marriage cohorts) and of absolute, chronological ages at marriage, and evaluating the contribution of changes in the age at marriage distribution to observed divorce rates. METHODS Direct standardisation and logistic regression analyses are applied to published marriage and divorce data for the 1974-1994 marriage cohorts in England ...
We estimated the associations between age at first marriage and recent intimate partner violence (IP...
In the last 100 years the mean age difference at marriage in England and Wales has fluctuated in the...
Twenty years ago, most people reaching age 50 had experience of just one union and celebrated their ...
Marriage stability has a wide range of determinants, such as education, marital history, and demogra...
Many studies showed that marrying younger is associated with a higher risk of divorce. We investigat...
An early age at first marriage is known to be associated with a high risk of divorce. Yet it has bee...
Although the common wisdom — based largely on Vital Statistics available only for the period through...
A study conducted by Kelly Raley and Larry Bumpass in 2003 showed the probability of divorce in the ...
Using three nationally representative data sets, researchers analyzed the trends in age at marriage,...
This thesis examines the spousal age difference, which is defined as the male age at marriage minus ...
We examine the stability of divorce determinants in the UK be-tween 1960 and 1989. Using retrospecti...
This thesis reviews recent trends in partnership formation and dissolution in Britain before investi...
The Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development is a prospective longitudinal survey of 411 South Lond...
Age at marriage has for decades been the strongest and most unequivocal predictor of marital failure...
Abstract This article critically evaluates the available data on trends in divorce in the United Sta...
We estimated the associations between age at first marriage and recent intimate partner violence (IP...
In the last 100 years the mean age difference at marriage in England and Wales has fluctuated in the...
Twenty years ago, most people reaching age 50 had experience of just one union and celebrated their ...
Marriage stability has a wide range of determinants, such as education, marital history, and demogra...
Many studies showed that marrying younger is associated with a higher risk of divorce. We investigat...
An early age at first marriage is known to be associated with a high risk of divorce. Yet it has bee...
Although the common wisdom — based largely on Vital Statistics available only for the period through...
A study conducted by Kelly Raley and Larry Bumpass in 2003 showed the probability of divorce in the ...
Using three nationally representative data sets, researchers analyzed the trends in age at marriage,...
This thesis examines the spousal age difference, which is defined as the male age at marriage minus ...
We examine the stability of divorce determinants in the UK be-tween 1960 and 1989. Using retrospecti...
This thesis reviews recent trends in partnership formation and dissolution in Britain before investi...
The Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development is a prospective longitudinal survey of 411 South Lond...
Age at marriage has for decades been the strongest and most unequivocal predictor of marital failure...
Abstract This article critically evaluates the available data on trends in divorce in the United Sta...
We estimated the associations between age at first marriage and recent intimate partner violence (IP...
In the last 100 years the mean age difference at marriage in England and Wales has fluctuated in the...
Twenty years ago, most people reaching age 50 had experience of just one union and celebrated their ...