Volume 24 - Article 5 | Pages 145–174
Things change: Women’s and men’s marital disruption dynamics in Italy during a time of social transformations, 1970-2003
By Silvana Salvini, Daniele Vignoli
Abstract
We study women’s and men’s marital disruption in Italy between 1970 and 2003. By applying an event-history analysis to the 2003 Italian variant of the Generations and Gender Survey we found that the spread of marital disruption started among middle-highly educated women. Then in recent years it appears that less educated women have also been able to dissolve their unhappy unions. Overall we can see the beginning of a reversed educational gradient from positive to negative. In contrast the trend in men’s marital disruption risk appears as a change over time common to all educational groups, although with persisting educational differentials.
Author's Affiliation
- Silvana Salvini - Università degli Studi di Firenze, Italy EMAIL
- Daniele Vignoli - Università degli Studi di Firenze, Italy EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Uncertain lives: Insights into the role of job precariousness in union formation in Italy
Volume 35 - Article 10
Religion and union formation in Italy: Catholic precepts, social pressure, and tradition
Volume 31 - Article 35
‘Silver splits’ in Europe: The role of grandchildren and other correlates
Volume 46 - Article 21
Union formation under conditions of uncertainty: The objective and subjective sides of employment uncertainty
Volume 45 - Article 5
Time preferences and fertility: Evidence from Italy
Volume 44 - Article 50
Happy parents’ tweets: An exploration of Italian Twitter data using sentiment analysis
Volume 40 - Article 25
Persistent joblessness and fertility intentions
Volume 40 - Article 8
The positive impact of women’s employment on divorce: Context, selection, or anticipation?
Volume 38 - Article 37
Towards a new understanding of cohabitation: Insights from focus group research across Europe and Australia
Volume 31 - Article 34
Whose job instability affects the likelihood of becoming a parent in Italy? A tale of two partners
Volume 26 - Article 2
Rising marital disruption in Italy and its correlates
Volume 20 - Article 4
Fertility change in Egypt: From second to third birth
Volume 15 - Article 18
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
A Bayesian model for age at death with cohort effects
Volume 51 - Article 33
| Keywords:
age at death,
Bayesian approach,
cohort effects,
Italy,
mortality
Childlessness in Korea: Role of education, marriage postponement, and marital childlessness
Volume 51 - Article 21
| Keywords:
educational differences,
Korea,
marital childlessness,
timing of marriage
Climate change and fertility desires: An experimental study among university students in Belgium and Italy
Volume 51 - Article 2
| Keywords:
Belgium,
climate change,
fertility desires,
Italy,
students,
young adults
Uncovering disability-free grandparenthood in Italy between 1998 and 2016 using gender-specific decomposition
Volume 50 - Article 42
| Keywords:
aging,
decomposition,
disability,
grandparenthood,
Italy
The effect of migration and time spent abroad on migrants’ health: A home/host country perspective
Volume 50 - Article 37
| Keywords:
Albania,
health,
Italy,
migrants,
propensity score
Cited References: 71
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar