Welcome to the Divorce Statistics and Studies Blog

This site continues, but does not duplicate, the work of the Divorce Statistics Collection site, which gathered information and analysis of divorce statistics, and citations and abstracts of studies on the incidence, causes and effects of divorce.This blog is interactive and collaborative: if you have information that is not on this blog nor on the Divorce Statistics Collection, please send it in, using the comments section.
To get complete information and citations, you should also review the research pages at the Howard Center, Smart Marriages, the Bristol Community Family Trust, the National Healthy Marriage Resource Center, RAND, the National Center for Policy Analysis, and the Divorce Statistics Collection’s page on your topic. The main pages or sub-sites within the Divorce Statistics Collection are:

Continue reading "Welcome to the Divorce Statistics and Studies Blog" »

November 05, 2008

Australian survey of divorce rates differing by education, age, smoking, children, but not alcohol

This story, which came via the Smart Marriages listserv, actually surveys a whole bunch of variables correlating with divorce rates, despite the headline.

ACADEMIC DIVIDE LINKED TO DIVORCE


Patricia Karvelas, Political correspondent | November 05, 2008
The Australian

WOMEN with tertiary educations who choose as a partner men who have not
finished high school are 10 times more likely to separate or get divorced
than women whose education is less than or equal to their partner's.

The finding is contained in a new study by researchers at the Australian
National University commissioned by the federal Government, which looks at
the factors behind the break-up of Australian families with children.

The project used Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey
data to investigate the factors that preceded the end of relationships.

The research, conducted by ANU's Centre for Mental Health Research and the
National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, considered whether
mental health problems, hazardous levels of alcohol consumption and smoking
were associated with divorce or separation. It found that education was a
key factor in relationship stability.

"Compared to couples in which partners had similar levels of educational
qualifications, those couples in which women reported tertiary
qualifications and men reported not completing high school had a tenfold
greater risk of divorce/separation," it says.

"This may reflect two factors. Firstly, women's educational attainment may
be a proxy for financial independence and, thus, the opportunity for women
to support themselves outside of the marriage. This removes a potential
barrier to divorce or separation.

"Secondly, these couples may experience greater conflict or dissatisfaction
within the relationship, perhaps associated with the fact that they are not
fulfilling the traditional gendered roles within marriage."

The analysis found couples with the opposite pattern of educational
attainment -- where men had the tertiary qualifications and women did not
complete high school -- did not demonstrate an increased risk of subsequent
marital instability and, if anything, showed greater than average stability.

The lowest rate of separation was found among couples where both partners
reported tertiary qualifications.

The study also found there was no association between alcohol consumption
and relationship instability.

But couples in which women were smokers -- regardless of whether the male
partner smoked -- were at increased risk of divorce or separation.

"We consider that this reflects the effectiveness of women's smoking as a
marker of social and economic disadvantage and adversity," the report says.

The study found that marital stability was associated with the birth of a
child within marriage and older age at marriage, and that religion was
important in the couple's lives.

September 02, 2008

Study Links Genes in Men to Marital Bonding or to Cohabitation & Divorce

These are two stories in a series on Sept. 1 and 2, 2008:

Link: 'Bonding Gene' Could Help Men Stay Married - washingtonpost.com.

Link: Study Links Gene Variant in Men to Marital Discord - washingtonpost.com.

Continue reading "Study Links Genes in Men to Marital Bonding or to Cohabitation & Divorce" »

August 20, 2008

Adultery and Divorce in Korea

This story includes some statistics on the grounds of divorce used in Korea, and which sex is accused of fault in divorces.
Link: International Family Law: Korea Okays Sex During Divorce.

August 11, 2008

2007 US divorce rate: 0.36%

Provisional divorce rates for calendar year 2007 were released July 14, in     Births, Marriages, Divorces, and Deaths: Provisional Data for 2007,     NVSR Volume 56, Number 21. The number is a slight decline from 2006 but is stable overall, and is the same as the rate in 2005. It is an annual rate of 0.36 divorces (i.e., 0.72 people getting divorced) for every 100 people in the population. I.e., 0.72% of the entire US population gets divorced every year.

Six states were not included because they failed to report their data: California, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Louisiana, and Minnesota.

The report also includes the total numbers of divorces in each state that reported.
Official state-level divorce rates still are available only through 2004.

The report for 2007 is available at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr56/nvsr56_21.htm
For future reports on divorce rates, check the National Vital Statistics Reports at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/pubs/pubd/nvsr/nvsr.

 

July 29, 2008

Japan's 2007 divorce rate continues 5-year decline

But divorce is still considerably above its level in the mid-1990s, which is when it began a relatively steep rise that was unprecedented in Japanese history.

 

Le nombre de divorces au Japon a enregistré en 2007 une cinquième année consécutive de baisse. A 255 000, contre 257 475 en 2006, il reste cependant élevé, puisqu'en 1995, il ne dépassait par les 199 016. A 2,02-2,04 en 2006 - contre 1,60 en 1995 -, le taux de séparation apparaît proche de celui de la France (2,2 en 2006).

... le nombre de divorces des personnes mariées depuis plus de trente-cinq ans a progressé de 16 % ...

... la baisse du nombre des divorces s'accompagne d'une contraction de celui des mariages : 714 000 en 2007 contre 731 000 en 2006.

Link: More here, from Le Monde.

June 30, 2008

Married and Poor: Basic Characteristics of Economically Disadvantaged Couples in the U.S. - Working Paper

Married and Poor: Basic Characteristics of Economically Disadvantaged Couples in the U.S. - Working Paper.

This study is from mid-2004 but brings together definitively a lot of information about correlations and interactions of poverty and wealth, marriage, divorce, and unwed parenthood. It's by David J. Fein.

June 16, 2008

Virginia divorce stats broken down by number of kids, region, county

You can get these for:
2006 at http://www.vdh.state.va.us/HealthStats/DivCC06.pdf
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000

Nothing for '07 yet as of mid-June, 2008.
If these links quit working at some point, check the main page at http://www.vdh.state.va.us/HealthStats/stats.asp or http://www.vdh.state.va.us/

That page also has population numbers and detailed breakdowns of marriage statistics as well as all kinds of other vital stats.

April 16, 2008

Latest divorce rate steady at 0.36%

The annual per capita divorce rate for the 12 months ending in September, 2007 -- the latest figures currently available -- show an annual rate of 0.36 divorces (i.e., 0.72 people getting divorced) for every 100 people in the population. For the latest figures, check the National Vital Statistics Reports at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/pubs/pubd/nvsr/nvsr.htm.

An earlier month's report had showed a rate of 0.34% for the 12 months ending in June 2007, but the rate is now 0.36%, the same as the 2006 rate.

Official state-level divorce rates still are available only through 2004.


http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr56/nvsr56_14.pdf

April 14, 2008

The Taxpayer Costs of Divorce and Unwed Childbearing: First-Ever Estimates for the Nation and All Fifty States

Divorce and unwed childbearing impose direct costs on government that are at least as much per year as the Iraq war -- $112 billion per year, even using the most methodologically cautious assumptions, says a new report published by the Institute for American Values.  

April 02, 2008

Major new stats on divorce demographics from Barna

The Barna Group, which has done major, highly respected studies in the past on the demographics of marriage, divorce and religion, released a major new survey March 31, based on interviews conducted in 2007.

Some of its findings:

25% of Americans over 18 have been divorced.
One-third of Americans who have ever married have divorced at least once. (Note: that's not the same as one-third of all marriages.)

The highest-divorce groups (per marriage):

downscale adults (39%) [i.e. income <$20,000, no college]
Baby Boomers (38%)
members of non-Christian faiths (38%)

self-described
social and political liberals  (37%)
African-Americans (36%),

The least-divorced groups (per marriage):

Asians (20%)
upscale adults (22%) [i.e. income >$75,000, college grads]
evangelicals (26%),
Catholics (28%),  
self-described
social and political conservatives (28%)

Groups with near-average divorce rates
(per marriage):
Whites 32%
Hispanics 31%
Moderates 33%
born-agains 33% [apparently very distinct from evangelicals although there's considerable overlap. Barna specializes in polling distinctions of religious identity.]
atheisits and agnostics 30% [rate may be distorted by their lower marriage rate, which is 65% -- average is 78% and evangelicals are 84%]