Citation
Guzzo, Karen Benjamin & Hayford, Sarah R. (2012). Unintended Fertility and the Stability of Coresidential Relationships. Social Science Research, 41(5), 1138-1151. PMCID: PMC3487158Abstract
Having an unintended birth is associated with maternal and child health outcomes, the mother-child relationship, and subsequent fertility. Unintended fertility likely also increases the risk of union dissolution for parents, but it is unclear whether this association derives from a causal effect or selection processes and whether it differs by union type. This article uses data from the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth to compare union stability after intended and unintended births in coresidential relationships. Results show that coresidential couples are more likely to break up after an unintended first or higher-order birth than after an intended first or higher-order birth, even when accounting for stable unobserved characteristics using fixed-effects models. The negative association is stronger for marriages than cohabitations, despite the overall higher dissolution rate of cohabiting unions. We conclude that unintended fertility at any parity is disruptive for coresidential couples in ways that increase the risk of union dissolution.URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch.2012.03.002Reference Type
Journal ArticleYear Published
2012Journal Title
Social Science ResearchAuthor(s)
Guzzo, Karen BenjaminHayford, Sarah R.