1. Marriage Instability: Variations by Size of Place and Region
- Author
-
Paul C. Glick
- Subjects
Geography ,business.industry ,Separation (statistics) ,Distribution (economics) ,Residence ,General Medicine ,Population health ,Census ,Socioeconomics ,business ,Instability ,Health equity ,Demography - Abstract
HIS study makes use of some of the first results that were tabulated from the 1960 Census to analyze the distribution of persons who had marriages that were disrupted by separation or divorce or who, though young, were not living with both parents. The purpose of the study is to throw light on variations by size of place and region with respect to three measures of marriage instability: a separation ratio, a divorce ratio, and the per cent of young children not living with both parents. The major hypothesis under examination is that all of these measures, which reflect instability in marriage, tend to show more variation between large and small places of residence than among the four census regions. The paper will discuss, first, the levels of the three measures for the country as a whole and for the several sizes of place within each region and, second, the results of an analysis of variance performed on the three measures by size of place and region. Scope and Definitions. Because of wide differences expected for white and nonwhite groups, the statistics for the two color groups are compared. At the time this paper was prepared (spring of 1962), data from the 1960 Census were not available on martial status by age. As an alternative, separation and divorce ratios were computed with the total number of married women (14 years old and over) as the base; by this device, distortions in a given type of area because of a large proportion of young (generally single) persons or of old (gen
- Published
- 1963