Cohabitation and the Evolving Nature of Intimate and Family Relationships

Sampson Lee Blair|Yongjun Zhang
Emerald
Emerald

This book can be opened with

Glassboxx eBooks and audiobooks can be opened on phones, tablets, iOS and Android devices

Hardback
9781804554197
08 December 2023
$155.00
eBook (PDF)
9781804554180
08 December 2023
$155.00
eBook (ePub)
9781804554203
08 December 2023
$155.00

Note on our eBooks and Audiobooks: you can read our eBooks (ePUB or PDF) and listen to audiobooks on the free Emerald Books app on iOS, Android, and desktop. Or read and listen on Emerald's online reader (ePUB eBooks and audiobooks only). To purchase a digital book you will need to create an account if you don’t already have one. After purchasing you will receive instructions on how to get started.

  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

In societies around the globe, couples are increasingly opting to live together without going through the formal and legal complications of marriage. Given the tremendous diversity in cohabiting couples, as well as the increasing prominence of this form of intimate relationships, Cohabitation and the Evolving Nature of Intimate and Family Relationships provides a more thorough comprehension of the structures, effects, and intimate practice of cohabitation around the world.

As a richly edited collection, the chapters delve into a wide array of topics including transitions into cohabitation, parenting and parental roles, division of domestic labor among cohabitors, sharing of economic resources, elderly cohabitors, legal complications of cohabitation, intimate partner violence, interconnections between cohabitation and marriage, sex and sexuality, assortative mating among cohabiting partners, premarital cohabitation and its consequences, relationship dissolution, gender ideologies, changing patterns of cohabitation, cohabitation and remarriage, and parental cohabitation and child development, among others. This is compelling reading for scholars of family research for better comprehending the structural, affectional, and other characteristics of cohabitation around the world.

Foreword; Sampson Lee Blair and Yongjun Zhang

  • Chapter 1. Individual and Relationship Determinants of Sexual Non-Exclusivity: Comparing Cohabiting, Dating, and Married Emerging Adults; Angela M. Kaufman-Parks, Monica A. Longmore, Wendy D. Manning, and Peggy C. Giordano
  • Chapter 2. Family Life Course Trajectories and Union Dissolution in Middle and Later Life; Zhuolin (Grace) Li and Margaret J. Penning
  • Chapter 3. All is Not Fair in Love and Housework: Perceptions of Labor Fairness and Relationship Attitudes in Cohabitating and Married Couples; Cassie Mead
  • Chapter 4. Protective Function of Cohabitation against Economic Worries; Daniel Baron and Ingmar Rapp
  • Chapter 5. Parental Role Construction among LGBTQ Parents in the Post-Equality Era; Allison Jendry James
  • Chapter 6. Partnered, Cohabiting, or Married: Childbearing and Mothers’ Mid-Life Health in the US, UK, and Norway; Sharon Sassler, Fenaba Rena Addo, Brienna Perelli-Harris, Trude Lappegård, and Stefanie Hoherz
  • Chapter 7. Convergence or Divergence? The Unfolding of Cohabitation in France, Germany, Italy, and Norway; Okka Zimmermann and Dirk Konietzka
  • Chapter 8. Intimate Partner Violence in Cohabiting Relationships: Young Women’s Voices from Rural Vhembe District, South Africa; Matamela Makongoza, Peace Kiguwa, and Simangele Mayisela
  • Chapter 9. Marriage by Cohabitation (Common Law Marriage) in Seychelles: Emerging Issues; Jamil Ddamulira Mujuzi
  • Chapter 10. Defining Cohabitation in the Ghanaian Context: Some Historical and Contemporary Perspectives; Rosemary Obeng-Hinneh
  • Chapter 11. Cohabitation in the Southern Cone: Recent Evolution, Associated Factors and Convergence; Carla Arévalo and Jorge A. Paz

Sampson Lee Blair is a Family Sociologist and Demographer at The State University of New York, Buffalo, USA. His research focuses upon parent-child relationships, mate selection, marriage, and fertility.

Yongjun Zhang is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and Institute for Advanced Computational Science, The State University of New York, Stony Brook, USA. His research combines big data with statistical, network, and computational methods to study family, social, and political behaviour.