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Cohabitation Information

Cohabitation is an arrangement where two people who are not married live together in an intimate relationship, particularly an emotionally and/or sexually intimate one, on a long-term or permanent basis.

More broadly, the term cohabitation can mean any number of people living together.

Contents

Reasons for cohabitation

Today, cohabitation is a common pattern among people in the Western world. More than two-thirds of married couples in the US admit to living together before getting married.[1] This is a far cry from a few decades ago. Before 1970, cohabitation was illegal in the United States.[2] Nowadays, it is seen as a normal step in the dating process.[3] People may live together for a number of reasons. Cohabitants could live together in order to save money, because of the convenience of living with another, or a need to find housing. [4] Today sixty percent of all marriages are preceded by a period of cohabitation.[5] Researchers suggest that couples live together as a way of trying out marriage to test compatibility with their partners, while still having the option of ending the relationship without legal implications. Couples who have plans to marry before moving in together or who are engaged before cohabiting typically marry within two years of living together.[6]

Cohabitation can be an alternative to marriage in situations where marriage is not able to happen for financial or other reasons, such as same-sex, some interracial or interreligious marriages.[7] Other reasons might include cohabitation as a way for polygamists or polyamorists to avoid breaking the law, a way to avoid the higher income taxes paid by some two-income married couples (in the United States), negative effects on pension payments (among older people), or philosophical opposition to the institution of marriage (that is, seeing little difference between the commitment to live together and the commitment to marriage).

Cohabitation, sometimes called de facto marriage, is becoming more commonly known as a substitute for conventional marriage.[8] In some states which recognize it, cohabitation can be viewed legally as common-law marriages, either after the duration of a specified period, or if the couple consider and behave accordingly as husband and wife.[9] (This helps provide the surviving partner a legal basis for inheriting the deceased's belongings in the event of the death of their cohabiting partner). In today's cohabiting relationships, forty percent of households include children, giving us an idea of how cohabitation could be considered a new normative type of family dynamic.[10]

Opposition

In the Western world, a man and a woman who lived together without being married were once socially shunned and persecuted and, in some cases, prosecuted by law. In some jurisdictions, cohabitation was illegal until relatively recently. Other jurisdictions have created a common-law marriage status when two people of the opposite sex live together for a prescribed period of time. Most jurisdictions no longer prosecute this choice. Consent to be spouses of all persons involved is not required. Therefore, it is likely that future court challenges in Canada will use this Canadian case law to claim married persons may also civilly marry other persons without divorcing first.

Effect on marriage

Conflicting studies on the effect of cohabitation on marriage have been published.

Increases likelihood of divorce

A scientific survey, conducted by researchers at Denver University, of over 1,000 married men and women in the United States of America found those who moved in with a lover before engagement or marriage reported significantly lower quality marriages and a greater possibility of a separation than other couples. About 20 percent of those who cohabited before getting engaged had since suggested divorce - compared with only 12 percent of those who only moved in together after getting engaged and 10 percent who did not cohabit prior to marriage.[11]

Psychologist Dr. Galena Rhoades said: "There might be a subset of people who live together before they got engaged who might have decided to get married really based on other things in their relationship - because they were already living together and less because they really wanted and had decided they wanted a future together. We think some couples who move in together without a clear commitment to marriage may wind up sliding into marriage partly because they are already cohabiting.".[11] Many cohabiting couples may also end up getting married due to pressure from their parents.

No effect

A conflicting study, published by the National Center for Health Statistics, with a sample of 12,571 people, concludes that those "who live together before marriage and those who don't both have about the same chances of a successful union".[12]

Cohabitation by region

This section requires expansion.
This article is outdated. Please update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. Please see the talk page for more information. (May 2011)

Americas

In America in 2007, it is estimated that 16.4 million households were maintained by two opposite sex persons who said they were unmarried. [13]

Asia

(a) The couple must hold themselves out to society as being akin to spouses. (b) They must be of legal age to marry. (c) They must be otherwise qualified to enter into a legal marriage, including being unmarried. (d) They must have voluntarily cohabited and held themselves out to the world as being akin to spouses for a significant period of time.

Europe

Middle East

Aside from the law, cohabiting remains very much taboo across the region. Nevertheless, the issue of cohabitation of unmarried couples has featured in some Tunisian movies, such as Les Silences du Palais (1994)

Oceania

In America, in 2003, 22.5% of couples were cohabiting.

See also

References

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be and removed. (November 2006)
  1. ^ "Cohabitation is replacing dating", "USA Today", 7/18/2005
  2. ^ "No Wedding? No Ring? No Problem.". U.S. News and World Report 128: 48. 2000.
  3. ^ Kramer, Elise (September/October 2004). "Cohabitation: Just a Phase?". Psychology Today 37: 28.
  4. ^ Kramer, Elise (September/October 2004). "Cohabitation: Just a Phase?". Psychology Today 37: 28.
  5. ^ "Cohabitation". ForYourMarriage.org. http://foryourmarriage.org/catholic-marriage/church-teachings/cohabitation/. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  6. ^ Murrow, Carrie; Lin Shi (2010). "The Influence of Cohabitation Purposes on Relationship Quality: An Examination in Dimensions". The American Journal of Family Therapy 38: 397-412. doi:10.1080/01/01926187.2010.513916.
  7. ^ Murrow, Carrie; Lin Shi (2010). "The Influence of Cohabitation Purposes on Relationship Quality: An Examination in Dimensions". The American Journal of Family Therapy 38: 397-412. doi:10.1080/01/01926187.2010.513916.
  8. ^ "Cohabitation - Trends and Patterns, Reasons For Cohabitation, Meanings Of Cohabitation, Consequences of Cohabitation, Conclusion". Net Industries. http://family.jrank.org/pages/279/Cohabitation.html. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  9. ^ Solot, Dorian. "Common Law Marriage Fact Sheet". unmarried.com. http://www.unmarried.org/common-law-marriage-fact-sheet.html. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  10. ^ "Cohabitation". ForYourMarriage.org. http://foryourmarriage.org/catholic-marriage/church-teachings/cohabitation/. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  11. ^ a b "Couples who live together before marriage more likely to get divorced". The Daily Telegraph (London). 2009-07-16. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/5840263/Couples-who-live-together-before-marriage-more-likely-to-get-divorced.html.
  12. ^ Jayson, Sharon (October 14, 2010). "Report: Cohabiting has little effect on marriage success" USA Today. <http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2010-03-02-cohabiting02_N.htm>
  13. ^ Cherlin, Andrew (2010). Public and Private Families. New York: McGraw Hill. pp. 227. ISBN 978-0-07-340435-6.
  14. ^ a b c Anne-Marie Ambert: Cohabitation and Marriage: How Are They Related?. The Vanier Institute of the Family, Fall 2005)
  15. ^ http://www.sullivan-county.com/bush/7_states.htm
  16. ^ Women and Islam in Bangladesh By Taj ul-Islam Hashmi, page 112
  17. ^ "Indonesia plans new morality laws". BBC News. 2005-02-06. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/world/asia-pacific/4239177.stm. Retrieved 2010-03-28.
  18. ^ http://paa2006.princeton.edu/download.aspx?submissionId=61321
  19. ^ :: GMA News.TV ::
  20. ^ [1] based on the official statistics of the National Statistic institute of Bulgaria(Bulgarian)
  21. ^ a b c Sember, Brette. "Unmarried With Children". http://unmarriedwithchildren.net/. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  22. ^ The Finnish population structure of 2005 at Statistics Finland (Finnish/Swedish)
  23. ^ Elected MPs and candidates by family type in 2003 at Statistics Finland (English)
  24. ^ [2]
  25. ^ Kaplan, Amit. 2002. The roads of freedom: cohabitation patterns in Israel. M. A. Thesis, Tel-Aviv University (in Hebrew)
  26. ^ See commentary on verses [Quran 23:1]: Vol. 3, notes 7-1, p. 241; 2000, Islamic Publications
  27. ^ Tafsir ibn Kathir 4:24
  28. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics

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