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Título

The reproductive context of cohabitation in comparative perspective: Contraceptive use in France, Spain and the United States

AutorSweeney, Megan M.; Castro Martín, Teresa CSIC ORCID ; Mills, Melinda
Palabras claveCohabitation
Contraceptions
France
Marriage
Social change
Spain
United States
Fecha de publicaciónene-2015
EditorMax Planck Institute for Demographic Research
CitaciónDemographic Research, 32 (5): 147-182 (2015)
ResumenBACKGROUND Discussions of cohabitation’s place in family formation regimes frequently emphasize comparisons of reproductive behavior among married versus cohabiting couples. Many argue that the rise in cohabitation may have been fueled by availability of highly effective contraception, but that differences in contraceptive use between married and cohabiting couples should diminish as cohabitation becomes more established. OBJECTIVE We ask whether cohabiting women in the United States, Spain, and France are more likely than married women in these countries to use the most effective contraceptive methods and reversible methods. We also investigate whether the association between union status and contraceptive use has changed since the mid-1990s. METHODS Using data from the U.S. National Survey of Family Growth, the Spanish Fertility, Family and Values Survey, the French Gender and Generations Survey, and the Fertility and Family Surveys, we first descriptively compare contraceptive use patterns of cohabiting women to those of married women and then estimate regression models to adjust for group differences in key background factors. RESULTS Net of differences in age and parity, cohabitors were more likely than married women to use the most effective contraceptives in the mid-1990s’ United States and France, yet notably not in Spain even when cohabitation was relatively uncommon. The case of Spain thus refutes the assumption that highly effective contraception is a necessary precursor for dramatic growth in cohabitation.
DescripciónEste artículo está sujeto a una licencia CC BY 3.0
Versión del editorhttp://dx.doi.org/10.4054/DemRes.2015.32.5
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/126758
DOI10.4054/DemRes.2015.32.5
E-ISSN1435-9871
Aparece en las colecciones: (CCHS-IEGD) Artículos




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