2012
DOI: 10.1007/s13524-012-0126-8
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Measuring Cohabitation and Family Structure in the United States: Assessing the Impact of New Data From the Current Population Survey

Abstract: In 2007, the Current Population Survey (CPS) introduced a measure that identifies all cohabiting partners in a household, regardless of whether they describe themselves as “unmarried partners” in the relationship to householder question. The CPS now also links children to their biological, step-, and adoptive parents. Using these new variables, we analyze the prevalence of cohabitation as well as the demographic and socioeconomic characteristics of different-sex cohabiting couples during the years 2007–2009. E… Show more

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Cited by 76 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…Regressions for cohabitation among minors were limited to respondents under 18 at the time of the survey, n = 327, 229, and 159 at the three waves, and n = 714 within 328 observations in the panel data 6-12 months of baseline, significantly higher than the percentage of noncohabiters who became pregnant. The relationship was particularly strong for minors (ages [15][16][17] who lived with their boyfriends, as would be predicted by the Theory of Gender and Power because minors have greater vulnerability to coercion than adults. This finding is not explained by cohabiting leading to more frequent sex or more unprotected sex, which was controlled for in the regressions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 77%
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“…Regressions for cohabitation among minors were limited to respondents under 18 at the time of the survey, n = 327, 229, and 159 at the three waves, and n = 714 within 328 observations in the panel data 6-12 months of baseline, significantly higher than the percentage of noncohabiters who became pregnant. The relationship was particularly strong for minors (ages [15][16][17] who lived with their boyfriends, as would be predicted by the Theory of Gender and Power because minors have greater vulnerability to coercion than adults. This finding is not explained by cohabiting leading to more frequent sex or more unprotected sex, which was controlled for in the regressions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…Youth is an independent socioeconomic exposure and may also modify the effect of cohabitation because cohabitation is rare for minors 17 and represents a potential for worse outcomes, 21 so we evaluate cohabitation for all participants and also separately for minors.…”
Section: Primary Predictors From the Theory Of Gender And Powermentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…2 By age 12, 40 percent of children had spent some time living with parents who were cohabiting. 3 In other words, cohabitation has become a central part of the family landscape for both children and adults, so much so that my colleague Pamela Smock and I have characterized this development as a "cohabitation revolution." 4…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%