Rodgers W L, Thornton A
Demography. 1985 May;22(2):265-79.
In this paper, we have traced changes in the patterns of first marriage in the United States for cohorts of men and women born in 1880 through 1965 and for the years from 1900 through 1983. There were striking changes in marriage rates associated with each of the world wars and with the depression of the 1930s. In addition to these short-term fluctuations, a long-term shift in marriage rates is observed over the period from after World War II until about 1970. By the end of the 1970s, however, marriage rates had returned to levels similar to those observed before the war. The basic similarity in the timing of changes in marriage rates across age levels and for both men and women, blacks and whites, is a striking characteristic of these marriage curves. There are also, however, important differences among these groups with respect to the magnitude and slopes of the shifts. The postwar marriage boom was strongest among the young (those under age 24) and among whites. Similarly, the declines in marriage rates observed in the 1970s were greatest among the young. The marriage rates for teenagers display trends that diverge in many respects from those of older persons. For example, the marriage rates of male teenagers did not show the "peaks" and "valley" associated with World War II for older age groups and female teenagers. Moreover, there is little sign of the postwar marriage boom among black teenagers of either sex. Indeed, the marriage rates of black teenagers began to decline soon after the war, and by the 1970s the marriage rates of both male and female black teenagers had fallen below those of their white counterparts, reversing the pattern that had existed through the first half of this century. During the twenty-five or so years of the postwar marriage boom, which we believe can be characterized best as a period phenomenon, there were trends-eddies within the mainstream-which are probably most easily interpreted as the consequence of a cohort effect.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在本文中,我们追踪了1880年至1965年出生的美国男女队列以及1900年至1983年期间初婚模式的变化。两次世界大战以及20世纪30年代的经济大萧条都导致了结婚率的显著变化。除了这些短期波动外,从二战后到大约1970年期间,结婚率还出现了长期变化。然而,到20世纪70年代末,结婚率已恢复到战前的类似水平。不同年龄层、不同性别、黑人和白人的结婚率变化时间基本相似,这是这些结婚率曲线的一个显著特征。不过,这些群体在变化幅度和斜率方面也存在重要差异。战后的结婚热潮在年轻人(24岁以下)和白人中最为强烈。同样,20世纪70年代结婚率的下降在年轻人中最为明显。青少年的结婚率呈现出许多与年长者不同的趋势。例如,青少年男性的结婚率并未像年龄较大群体和青少年女性那样出现与二战相关的“高峰”和“低谷”。此外,黑人青少年无论男女都几乎没有战后结婚热潮的迹象。事实上,黑人青少年的结婚率在战后不久就开始下降,到20世纪70年代,黑人青少年男女的结婚率都低于白人同龄人,扭转了本世纪上半叶存在的模式。在战后结婚热潮的大约25年里,我们认为这一时期现象最能被描述为一种时期现象,主流中存在一些趋势——漩涡,这可能最容易被解释为队列效应的结果。(摘要截选至400字)