Thinking about change in illegitimacy ratios: United States, 1963-1983.

H L Smith, P Cutright
Author Information
  1. H L Smith: Population Studies Center, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-6298.

Abstract

What has been the recent trend in illegitimacy in the United States? The answer depends on what is being measured. If the focus is on illegitimacy rates, then the trend is mixed. Illegitimacy ratios, however, have been skyrocketing. We show that this is primarily the result of declining nuptiality (and rising marital dissolution) and secondarily the result of decreases in marital fertility. We argue that the illegitimacy ratio is the better index of the social consequences of out-of-wedlock childbearing and that the high ratios of recent decades are unlikely to abate in the foreseeable future.

References

  1. Sociol Focus. 1983 Apr;16(2):117-27 [PMID: 12340179]
  2. Am Sociol Rev. 1965 Dec;30(6):843-61 [PMID: 5846306]
  3. Demography. 1986 Nov;23 (4):563-78 [PMID: 3803654]
  4. Am Sociol Rev. 1976;41(3):511-27 [PMID: 11630575]
  5. Am Sociol Rev. 1966 Oct;31(5):673-83 [PMID: 5977391]
  6. Demography. 1978 Nov;15(4):397-432 [PMID: 738471]

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Black or African American
Age Factors
Female
Fertility
Humans
Illegitimacy
National Center for Health Statistics, U.S.
Parents
Single Person
United States
White People

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0illegitimacyrecenttrendUnitedratiosresultmaritalStates?answerdependsmeasuredfocusratesmixedIllegitimacyhoweverskyrocketingshowprimarilydecliningnuptialityrisingdissolutionsecondarilydecreasesfertilityargueratiobetterindexsocialconsequencesout-of-wedlockchildbearinghighdecadesunlikelyabateforeseeablefutureThinkingchangeratios:States1963-1983

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