转型期四个原社会主义国家男性第一次合伙关系的形成

C. Mureșan, L. Oláh
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引用次数: 1

摘要

非婚同居在发达社会变得越来越普遍,尽管在国家社会主义垮台后的一段时间里,中欧和东欧的情况有所不同。在本文中,我们重点研究了保加利亚、匈牙利、波兰和罗马尼亚在20世纪80年代至21世纪初之间男性第一次伴侣关系模式的变化,具体解决了受教育程度影响方面的性别差异。从这些国家的第一轮世代和性别规划中提取的男性和女性数据进行了分析,依赖于比例风险事件历史模型,该模型具有分段恒定的第一次结合(同居或直婚-作为竞争风险)的基线强度。我们发现,在所有被分析的国家中,男性的受教育程度对婚姻形成的影响都是正的,但只有匈牙利对女性的影响是正的。除了波兰之外,在男性同居中没有这种梯度。随着时间的推移,同居的普及程度越来越高,而结婚的趋势却在下降,导致非婚姻结合在20世纪90年代末至21世纪初取代婚姻成为第一次伴侣关系的主要形式,罗马尼亚除外。与女性教育优势不断增强相对应的是,结婚率下降的趋势可能与该地区最具吸引力的高学历男性供应有限(而且正在减少)有关。本研究的主要贡献是填补了关于家庭信息模式变化的知识空白,强调了在重大社会转型时期中欧-东欧男性的第一次共同居住联盟。研究结果表明,受教育程度的性别影响对第一次结合的类型具有重要意义。
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Men’s First Partnership Formation in Four Former State-socialist Countries during the Transition Period
Non-marital cohabitation has become increasingly common in advanced societies, although somewhat less so in Central-Eastern Europe in the period immediately following the fall of state socialism. In this paper we focus on changes in men’s first partnership patterns in Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland and Romania between the 1980s and early 2000s, specifically addressing gender differences with respect to the effects of educational attainment. Data on men and women extracted from the first round of Generations and Gender Programme in these countries are analysed, relying on proportional hazards event history models with piecewise constant baseline intensity for entering a first union (cohabitation or direct marriage – as competing risks). We find a positive educational gradient for marriage formation among men in all countries analysed, but only in Hungary for women. No such gradient is seen for cohabitation among men with the exception of Poland. The popularity of cohabitation increased over time while the trend for marriage entry declined, resulting in non-marital unions replacing marriage as the main form of first partnerships by the late 1990s-early 2000s, except for Romania. Declining marriage trends paralleled by women’s growing educational advantage are likely to be related to the limited (and decreasing) supply of highly educated men as most attractive marriage partners in the region. The main contribution of this study is to fill the knowledge gap on changes in family formation patterns with emphasis on men’s first co-residential unions in Central-Eastern Europe in the period of major societal transition. The results point to the importance of gendered effects of educational attainment with respect to the type of first union formed.
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