The study reported in this article had three goals. The first was to de- scribe and categorize the perceived causes of divorce, as reported by a sample of recently divorced individuals. The second goal was to see how the reported causes of divorce varied with structural factors (such as gen- der and social class) and life course variables (such as age at marriage, du- ration of marriage, and having children). The third goal focused on a topic rarely addressed in the research literature: links between the perceived causes of divorce and subsequent adjustment. In particular, we examined people’s causal attributions for divorce (whether the perceived cause was located within the respondent, the spouse, the relationship, or forces exter- nal to the relationship) and how these attributions related to divorce ad- justment, attachment to the former spouse, and general appraisals of life. We use national longitudinal data collected between 1980 and 1997 for this purpose.
The study reported in this article had three goals. The first was to de- scribe and categorize the perceived causes of divorce, as reported by a sample of recently divorced individuals. The second goal was to see how the reported causes of divorce varied with structural factors (such as gen- der and social class) and life course variables (such as age at marriage, du- ration of marriage, and having children). The third goal focused on a topic rarely addressed in the research literature: links between the perceived causes of divorce and subsequent adjustment. In particular, we examined people’s causal attributions for divorce (whether the perceived cause was located within the respondent, the spouse, the relationship, or forces exter- nal to the relationship) and how these attributions related to divorce ad- justment, attachment to the former spouse, and general appraisals of life. We use national longitudinal data collected between 1980 and 1997 for this purpose.
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