1. Single Females in Rural Energy-Impacted Counties: The Effects of Rapid Growth and a Male Marriage-Market Squeeze.
- Author
-
Hooper, Douglas A. and England, J. Lynn
- Subjects
RURAL women ,ECONOMIC development ,SINGLE women ,MARRIAGE ,ENERGY development - Abstract
There are two hypotheses concerning how rapid growth affects women in rural communities: (1) women are more adversely affected than men, and (2) growth liberates women from their traditional sex roles. We used a specific subgroup of the female population-single, never- married females of marriageable age-to examine these two hypotheses. This paper focuses on how a male marriage-market squeeze caused by the influx of a large number of single, never-married males of marriageable age affects these females. The hypotheses, combined with proposals drawn from the demographic literature on marriage markets, are tested using data from counties in Montana and Utah impacted by energy development in the mid- and late 1970s. The measures used are changes in nuptiality rates and age patterns of first marriages. Our results do not allow us to fully accept or reject either hypothesis. Rather, changes in age patterns of marriage indicate that sorting out the local effects from the more pervasive social effects is problematic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988