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marriage [2014/08/12 20:13] – [Marriage as social trend and as cultural construct] Ryan Schram (admin)marriage [2021/06/30 23:33] (current) – [References] Ryan Schram (admin)
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 ## The marriage gap ## ## The marriage gap ##
  
-Is the value of marriage purely subjective, then? Actually, no. In her op-ed, Coontz goes on to point out another trend in marriage rates. Wealthy and well-educated people are more likely to marry, and more likely to marry people of a similar background. High school graduates and working class people are less likely to marry at all, even though they also say in surveys that they value marriage as much as others, and for the same reasons. That is, people with less education still participate in the same culture and its values of marriage, but find it hard to establish marriages as adults. Moreover, society rewards people who are married. There is a huge marriage benefit for well-educated married women. On top of their greater socioeconomic standing, many aspects of life are simply easier for well-educated people because they have a spouse (see also deParle 2012). Thus changes in marriage are not simply shifts in attitudes. Structural forces are in play as well. Why does this gap exist? +Is the value of marriage purely subjective, then? Actually, no. In her op-ed, Coontz goes on to point out another trend in marriage rates (2010). Wealthy and well-educated people are more likely to marry, and more likely to marry people of a similar background. High school graduates and working class people are less likely to marry at all, even though they also say in surveys that they value marriage as much as others, and for the same reasons. That is, people with less education still participate in the same culture and its values of marriage, but find it hard to establish marriages as adults. Moreover, society rewards people who are married. There is a huge marriage benefit for well-educated married women. On top of their greater socioeconomic standing, many aspects of life are simply easier for well-educated people because they have a spouse (see also deParle 2012). Thus changes in marriage are not simply shifts in attitudes. Structural forces are in play as well. Why does this gap exist?  
 + 
 +## Marriage as a civil rights issue ## 
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 +{{:2654:14-556_3204.pdf|Obergefell et al. v. Hodges, Director, Ohio Department of Health et al., 576 US __ (2015). Supreme Court of the United States.}} 
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 +See especially the PDF pages 3 in Kennedy's opinion and pages 75-76 in Scalia's dissent.  
  
 ## References ## ## References ##
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 Swallow, Julian. 2010. “Couples Rejecting Marriage for de Facto.” Australian Geographic. http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/news/2010/09/couples-rejecting-marriage-for-de-facto. Swallow, Julian. 2010. “Couples Rejecting Marriage for de Facto.” Australian Geographic. http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/news/2010/09/couples-rejecting-marriage-for-de-facto.
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 +<WRAP box similar>~~SIMILAR~~</WRAP>
  
marriage.1407899616.txt.gz · Last modified: 2014/08/12 20:13 by Ryan Schram (admin)