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Why Marriage Matters, Second Edition |
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Twenty-Six Conclusions from the Social Sciences
Family
- Marriage increases the likelihood that fathers and mothers have good relationships with
their children.
- Cohabitation is not the functional equivalent of marriage.
- Growing up outside an intact marriage increases the likelihood that children will
themselves divorce or become unwed parents.
- Marriage is a virtually universal human institution.
- Marriage, and a normative commitment to marriage, foster high quality relationships
between adults, as well as between parents and children.
- Marriage has important biosocial consequences for adults and children.
Economics
- Divorce and unmarried childbearing increase poverty for both children and mothers.
- Married couples seem to build more wealth on average than singles or cohabiting
couples.
- Marriage reduces poverty and material hardship for disadvantaged women and their
children.
- Minorities benefit economically from marriage.
- Married men earn more money than do single men with similar education and job
histories.
- Parental divorce (or failure to marry) appears to increase children's risk of school failure.
- Parental divorce reduces the likelihood that children will graduate from college and
achieve high-status jobs.
Physical Health and Longevity
- Children who live with their own two married parents enjoy better physical health, on
average, than do children in other family forms.
- Parental marriage is associated with a sharply lower risk of infant mortality.
- Marriage is associated with reduced rates of alcohol and substance abuse for both adults
and teens.
- Married people, especially married men, have longer life expectancies than do otherwise
similar singles.
- Marriage is associated with better health and lower rates of injury, illness, and disability
for both men and women.
- Marriage seems to be associated with better health among minorities and the poor.
Mental Health and Emotional Well Being
- Children whose parents divorce have higher rates of psychological distress and mental
illness.
- Divorce appears to increase significantly the risk of suicide.
- Married mothers have lower rates of depression than do single or cohabiting mothers.
- Boys raised in single-parent families are more likely to engage in delinquent and criminal
behavior.
- Marriage appears to reduce the risk that adults will be either perpetrators or victims of
crime.
- Married women appear to have a lower risk of experiencing domestic violence than do
cohabiting or dating women.
- A child who is not living with his or her own two married parents is at greater risk for
child abuse.
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