Monday, November 22, 2010

Research suggests marriage might be nearly obsolete

Matrimony study hints at feasible obsolescence

There are many solutions to specify the concept of marriage. Yet regardless of whether it’s an emotional, economic or statutory arrangement, it might be nearly obsolete in America, implies the Pew Research Center. More United States kids than ever in recorded history are living in single-parent family members where that parent is divorced, separated or was never married in the first place, writes the Associated Press. Article source – Study suggests marriage may be nearly obsolete by Personal Money Store.

Issues concerning classification of family matrimony

The classification of the American family is pretty fluid right now too, while the importance of matrimony being in flux as shown in the Pew group research along with Time magazine. The sea change has reportedly prompted the Census Bureau to adopt broader definitions of what constitutes a family member, particularly where matters of poverty and unmarried couples are concerned.

Family does not necessarily mean marriage anymore. This is what Pew team explains. Dr. Andrew Cherlin, sociology and public policy professor at Johns Hopkins University, told the AP that "Now there are several methods to have a successful family life and more people accept them.”

The brand new American family, through the marriage numbers

The Pew marriage and family research shows that there are quite a few children in homes with single or two parent homes that have parents who are not married anymore or just not married at all. In fact, 29 percent of kids live this way. That’s five times the number of such family members in 1960. The large number is 39 percent; that’s the percentage of Pew respondents who said matrimony was becoming obsolete. That number was down in 1978. It was only 28 percent of Americans who felt this way. This correlates with the Pew findings as shown in the United States census data from Sept 2010. only 52 percent of adults over 18 were married.

The economic climate is so dismal

While most Americans seem to agree that a married couple constitutes a family, a whopping 80 percent of respondents also recognized a family members as "an unmarried, opposite-sex couple with children or a single parent," while 60 percent recognized same-sex couples with kids as families. The unmarried life is something economics has affected quite a bit. There were 13 percent more opposite-sex unmarried couples just compared to last year. Because of unemployment and advantages like health insurance becoming more accessible to all "alternative" families, marriage has gone down making long-term marriage commitments unlikely.

Articles cited

Newser

newser.com/article/d9jignp00/at-the-thanksgiving-table-fewer-children-raised-by-married-parents-as-nation-redefines-family.html

New Yorkers’ views of marriage

youtube.com/watch?v=7AdLoyH7ZRI



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