The myth of long-term stable relationships outside of marriage
• 45 per cent of young teenagers (aged 13-15 years old) are not living with both parents • Half of all family breakdown takes place
Understanding family stability and informing the debate about marriage and commitment.
Dr Harry Benson’s PhD Summary: ‘The Timing of Marriage
and Union Dissolution’, our Research Director’s PhD Thesis.
At Marriage Foundation, our research focuses on understanding the realities of family stability and instability: what happens to couples and their children; who stays together; and why some relationships break down. By grounding the public conversation in evidence rather than assumption, our work helps build a clearer understanding of the measurable significance of marriage.
• 45 per cent of young teenagers (aged 13-15 years old) are not living with both parents • Half of all family breakdown takes place
The Marriage Foundation think-tank has produced a report revealing that second marriages are more stable than first marriages, challenging the widely held belief that couples
A new report by The Marriage Foundation think-tank has shattered the common assumption that the divorce rate for all couples is higher than it was
A new report from The Marriage Foundation finds that after 10 years of marriage the divorce rate for celebrities is 40 per cent. For the
From their peak in 1993, the number of divorces in England and Wales has fallen by 27% from 165,018 to 119,589 per year. More importantly,