![]() Race/ethnic differences in the marital expectations of adolescents: The role of romantic relationships. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B, 34(2), 187–220. Cohabitation and the declining marriage premium for men. Births to Unmarried Women: Indicators on Children and Youth. Family instability and children’s early problem behavior. Journal of Marriage and Family, 68(3), 718–732. The prevalence and correlates of multipartnered fertility among urban us parents. Population Research and Policy Review, 23(5), 513–542. The effects of welfare and child support policies on union formation. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 55(2), 338–355. Race differences in attitudinal and motivational factors in the decision to marry. Race-ethnic differences in marital quality and divorce. Journal of Marriage and Family, 77(1), 177–190. Family structure and child well-being: Integrating family complexity. Marriage and child well-being: Research and policy perspectives. Cohabitation, marriage, and divorce in a model of match quality. Feminization and juvenilization of poverty: Trends, relative risks, causes, and consequences. ![]() The Journal of Political Economy, 81(4), 813–846. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.īecker, G. Streetwise: Race, class, and change in an urban community. Racial disparities have important implications for child wellbeing and intergenerational transmission of inequalities.Īnderson, E. With the general decline in marriage and rise in cohabitation, our paper tried to assess whether cohabitation is a leading factor for marriage or a substitute for marriage for unmarried mothers. ![]() Our paper further contributes to this literature by examining changes in cohabitation patterns, educational attainment, poverty status and attitudes of gender distrust that are able to partially explain and reduce these racial gaps in transitions to marriage. We found that Black mothers were 60–65% more likely to delay marriage after a non-marital birth compared to White mothers and these racial gaps were only partially explained by economic, demographic and attitudinal factors. Unlike prior studies that have explained racial differences in the transitions to marriage among unmarried women, our study used the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study to examine racial differences in the transitions to marriage among unmarried women following a non-marital birth. ![]()
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