Title
Religious Heterogamy and Relationship Stability: A Comparison of Married and Cohabiting Unions
Author(s)
Richard J. Petts Richard Petts (Ball State University)
Abstract
Many studies have explored dynamics within religiously heterogamous marriages, but little is known about religiously heterogamous cohabiting unions. Using data from the Fragile Families Study, this study examines the influence of religious heterogamy on union stability among married and cohabiting couples. Results suggest that religious heterogamy is more common in cohabiting unions than marriages. Results also suggest that cohabiting unions are more likely to dissolve than marriages, and the risk of separation is higher for religiously heterogamous cohabiting unions (especially those in which one partner is religious and the other is not) than religiously heterogamous marriages. Finally, there is evidence showing that some religiously heterogamous cohabiting couples have a higher risk of relationship dissolution than religious heterogamous married couples due to lower relationship quality. Overall, this study extends the religion and family literature by showing that religious differences may lead to greater instability for cohabiting relationships than marriages.
Creation Date
2009-11
Section URL ID
CRCW
Paper Number
WP09-23-FF.pdf
URL
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.556.1705&rep=rep1&type=pdf
File Function
Jel
D100, D190, D690, H310, J120
Keyword(s)
religion, behavior, religious attendance, fathers, mothers, children
Suppress
false
Series
8