Kuhnt Anne-Kristin, Krapf Sandra
Department of Sociology, University of Duisburg-Essen, Duisburg, Germany.
Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES), University of Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany.
Front Sociol. 2020 Nov 13;5:538977. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2020.538977. eCollection 2020.
This paper compares the partnership arrangements of Turkish and Ethnic German immigrants (i.e., return migrants from Ethnic German communities from predominantly Eastern European countries), the two largest migrant groups in Germany, and native Germans. Most existing analyses of migrants' partnerships focus on intermarriage, marriage formation, or union dissolution. We know only a little, however, about the prevalence of non-marital living arrangements. Given that single person households and cohabitation are widespread phenomena mainly in post-materialist societies, analyzing whether immigrants engage in these behaviors sheds light on potential adaptation processes. The analyses are based on the German Microcensus of the years 2009 and 2013, with a focus on adults in the 18-40 age group. First, we present descriptive findings on the prevalence of partnership arrangements of immigrants and native Germans. Second, we estimate cross-sectional regressions with the partnership arrangement as the outcome variable in order to control for compositional differences between immigrant groups with respect to education. Our results show that while the vast majority of first-generation immigrants are married, the share of married natives is considerably smaller. Living in an independent household without a partner and cohabitation are rare phenomena among immigrants. By contrast, about one in seven natives is cohabiting and more than one quarter is living in an independent household without a partner. The most prevalent partnership living arrangement of the Turkish second generation is living in the parental household without a partner. These results are robust after controlling for education, age, and year in the multiple regression analysis.
本文比较了德国最大的两个移民群体——土耳其移民和德裔移民(即主要来自东欧国家的德裔社区的回流移民)以及德国本土居民的伴侣关系安排。现有的大多数关于移民伴侣关系的分析都集中在异族通婚、婚姻形成或婚姻解体上。然而,我们对非婚姻生活安排的普遍程度了解甚少。鉴于单人家庭和同居主要是后物质主义社会中的普遍现象,分析移民是否参与这些行为有助于揭示潜在的适应过程。分析基于2009年和2013年的德国微观人口普查,重点关注18至40岁的成年人。首先,我们展示了关于移民和德国本土居民伴侣关系安排普遍程度的描述性结果。其次,我们以伴侣关系安排作为结果变量进行横截面回归估计,以控制移民群体在教育方面的构成差异。我们的结果表明,虽然绝大多数第一代移民已婚,但已婚本土居民的比例要小得多。在移民中,没有伴侣独自生活和同居是罕见现象。相比之下,大约七分之一的本土居民同居,超过四分之一的本土居民没有伴侣独自生活。土耳其第二代最普遍的伴侣生活安排是没有伴侣与父母同住。在多元回归分析中控制教育、年龄和年份后,这些结果依然稳健。