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Title: Cohabitation Is No Longer Associated With Elevated Spousal Homicide Rates in the United States

Citation Type: Journal Article

Publication Year: 2012

Abstract: Margo Wilson and collaborators discovered that cohabiting couples had very much higher spousal homicide rates than those in registered marriages, and cross-national research has shown this difference to be widespread. We now find that homicide rates in the two sorts of unions have converged in the United States, such that the previously large difference had completely vanished by 2005. Distinct age patterns whereby registered marriages are most lethal in youth and cohabitation is most lethal in middle age have nevertheless persisted. While their homicide rates were converging between 1990 and 2005, married and cohabiting couples were not growing more similar in their basic demographic attributes: age distributions and unemployment rates remained distinct, and differences in education and income actually increased. Why homicide rates in the two classes of unions have ceased to differ remains unknown. We suggest some lines of research that may help provide answers.

User Submitted?: No

Authors: James, Birdie; Daly, Martin

Periodical (Full): Homicide Studies

Issue: 4

Volume: 16

Pages: 393-403

Data Collections: IPUMS USA

Topics: Crime and Deviance, Family and Marriage

Countries:

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