Prior research found that lower sexual frequency and satisfaction were associated with higher rates of divorce, but little research had examined the role of sexual activity in the dissolution of cohabiting unions. We drew upon social exchange theory to hypothesize why sexual frequency is more important in cohabitation: (a) cohabitors\u27 lower costs of finding sexual alternatives, (b) cohabitors\u27 lower barriers to ending the relationship in the form of union-specific economic and noneconomic capital, and (c) cohabitors\u27 higher expectations for sexual activity. Using the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 5,902), we examined the relationship between sexual frequency and union dissolution. Results indicated that low sexual ...
Very little is known about the influence of sexual timing on relationship outcomes. Is it better to ...
Research in the past decade has centered around questions concerning the impact of cohabitation on m...
This paper examines a topic of continuing interest for demographers and sociolo-gists of the family:...
Prior research found that lower sexual frequency and satisfaction were associated with higher rates ...
The frequency of sexual intercourse within couples is associated with a variety of factors, such as ...
Little is known about how marital sexual interaction influences eventual marital disruption, despite...
The cohabitation effect has been identified as a factor in former cohabitors’ increased marital inst...
Cohabitors and married people who cohabited before marriage have higher risks of union dissolution t...
ii Using the first six rounds of data from the 1997 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, I analyze...
Recent evidence from Canada and Sweden indicates that cohabitation prior to marriage significantly i...
Contemporary men and women increasingly express preferences for egalitarian unions. One recent high ...
Breakdown of marriage and cohabitation is common in Western countries and is costly for individuals ...
A wealth of scholarship generally finds that marriage protects against crime, but there is less cons...
Recent research has hinted, that the very rules governing a marital relationship (specifically the m...
Are cohabiting couples more likely than married couples to break up in response to perceptions that ...
Very little is known about the influence of sexual timing on relationship outcomes. Is it better to ...
Research in the past decade has centered around questions concerning the impact of cohabitation on m...
This paper examines a topic of continuing interest for demographers and sociolo-gists of the family:...
Prior research found that lower sexual frequency and satisfaction were associated with higher rates ...
The frequency of sexual intercourse within couples is associated with a variety of factors, such as ...
Little is known about how marital sexual interaction influences eventual marital disruption, despite...
The cohabitation effect has been identified as a factor in former cohabitors’ increased marital inst...
Cohabitors and married people who cohabited before marriage have higher risks of union dissolution t...
ii Using the first six rounds of data from the 1997 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, I analyze...
Recent evidence from Canada and Sweden indicates that cohabitation prior to marriage significantly i...
Contemporary men and women increasingly express preferences for egalitarian unions. One recent high ...
Breakdown of marriage and cohabitation is common in Western countries and is costly for individuals ...
A wealth of scholarship generally finds that marriage protects against crime, but there is less cons...
Recent research has hinted, that the very rules governing a marital relationship (specifically the m...
Are cohabiting couples more likely than married couples to break up in response to perceptions that ...
Very little is known about the influence of sexual timing on relationship outcomes. Is it better to ...
Research in the past decade has centered around questions concerning the impact of cohabitation on m...
This paper examines a topic of continuing interest for demographers and sociolo-gists of the family:...