教育同类交配八十年:研究说明。

IF 3.6 1区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY Demography Pub Date : 2024-09-18 DOI:10.1215/00703370-11558914
Noah Hirschl,Christine R Schwartz,Elia Boschetti
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国最近的社会和经济趋势,包括经济不平等的加剧、女性教育优势的增加以及在线约会的兴起,对教育同配模式产生了模糊的影响。在本研究报告中,我们利用美国十年一次的人口普查和美国社区调查,研究了过去八十年(1940 年至 2020 年)美国教育同配现象的变化,延伸并扩展了 Schwartz 和 Mare 早期的研究成果。我们发现,Schwartz 和 Mare 所指出的教育同配现象的上升并没有持续下去。教育同配现象的增长在 1990 年左右停滞,并在 2000 年代开始逆转。我们发现,婚姻跨越教育界限的趋势越来越明显,但大学学历仍然是通婚的最强分界线。解释这种新模式的一个关键趋势是,女性越来越倾向于嫁给教育程度比自己低的男性。如果没有这一趋势,同妻现象会一直持续到 2010 年代初。我们还显示了不同种族、民族、出生地以及同性和异性配偶之间的巨大异质性。
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Eight Decades of Educational Assortative Mating: A Research Note.
Recent social and economic trends in the United States, including increasing economic inequality, women's growing educational advantage, and the rise of online dating, have ambiguous implications for patterns of educational homogamy. In this research note, we examine changes in educational assortative mating in the United States over the last eight decades (1940 to 2020) using the U.S. decennial censuses and the American Community Survey, extending and expanding earlier work by Schwartz and Mare. We find that the rise in educational homogamy noted by Schwartz and Mare has not continued. Increases in educational homogamy stalled around 1990 and began reversing in the 2000s. We find a growing tendency for marriages to cross educational boundaries, but a college degree remains the strongest dividing line to intermarriage. A key trend explaining this new pattern is women's increasing tendency to marry men with less education than themselves. If not for this trend, homogamy would have continued increasing until the early 2010s. We also show substantial heterogeneity by race, ethnicity, and nativity and among same- versus different-sex couples.
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来源期刊
Demography
Demography DEMOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
2.90%
发文量
82
期刊介绍: Since its founding in 1964, the journal Demography has mirrored the vitality, diversity, high intellectual standard and wide impact of the field on which it reports. Demography presents the highest quality original research of scholars in a broad range of disciplines, including anthropology, biology, economics, geography, history, psychology, public health, sociology, and statistics. The journal encompasses a wide variety of methodological approaches to population research. Its geographic focus is global, with articles addressing demographic matters from around the planet. Its temporal scope is broad, as represented by research that explores demographic phenomena spanning the ages from the past to the present, and reaching toward the future. Authors whose work is published in Demography benefit from the wide audience of population scientists their research will reach. Also in 2011 Demography remains the most cited journal among population studies and demographic periodicals. Published bimonthly, Demography is the flagship journal of the Population Association of America, reaching the membership of one of the largest professional demographic associations in the world.
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