Volume 30 - Article 18 | Pages 535–546  

When one spouse has an affair, who is more likely to leave?

By Paula England, Paul D. Allison, Liana C. Sayer

References

Amato, P.R. and Rogers, S.J. (1997). A Longitudinal Study of Marital Problems and Subsequent Divorce. Journal of Marriage and Family 59(3): 612-624.

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England, P. and McClintock, E.A. (2009). The Gendered Double Standard of Aging in US Marriage Markets. Population and Development Review 35(4): 797-816.

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Laumann, E.O., Gagnon, J.H., Michael, R.T., and Michaels, S. (1994). The social organization of sexuality: sexual practices in the United States. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

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Previti, D. and Amato, P.R. (2004). Is Infidelity a Cause or a Consequence of Poor Marital Quality? Journal of Social and Personal Relationships 21(2): 217-230.

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Sayer, L.C., England, P., Allison, P.D., and Kangas, N. (2011). She Left, He Left: How Employment and Satisfaction Affect Women’s and Men’s Decisions to Leave Marriages. American Journal of Sociology 116(6): 1982-2018.

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Treas, J. and Giesen, D. (2000). Sexual Infidelity Among Married and Cohabiting Americans. Journal of Marriage and Family 62(1): 48-60.

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Yamaguchi, K. (2000). Multinomial Logit Latent - Class Regression Models: An Analysis of the Predictors of Gender Role Attitudes among Japanese Women. American Journal of Sociology 105(6): 1702-1740.

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