Lessons Learned from Non-Marriage Experiments

被引:9
|
作者
Schneider, Daniel [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Sociol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
来源
FUTURE OF CHILDREN | 2015年 / 25卷 / 02期
关键词
MENS CAREER-DEVELOPMENT; MATE AVAILABILITY; FAMILY-STRUCTURE; DECADES; INTERVENTION; ABECEDARIAN; OUTCOMES; PROGRAM; INCOME;
D O I
10.1353/foc.2015.0017
中图分类号
D669 [社会生活与社会问题]; C913 [社会生活与社会问题];
学科分类号
1204 ;
摘要
In the contemporary United States, marriage is closely related to money. Men and (perhaps to a lesser extent) women with more education, higher incomes, larger stocks of wealth, and more stable employment are more likely to marry than are people in more precarious economic positions. But is this relationship truly causal? That is, does economic insufficiency cause people to marry later and less often? Daniel Schneider reviews evidence from social experiments in areas such as early childhood education, human capital development, workforce training, and income support to assess whether programs that successfully increased the economic wellbeing of disadvantaged men and women also increased the likelihood that they would marry. These programs were not designed to affect marriage. But to the extent that they increased participants' economic resources, they could have had such an effect. Examining these programs offers three key benefits. First, their experimental designs provide important insight into the causal role of economic resources for marriage. Second, they give us within-group comparisons of disadvantaged men and women, some of whom received economic "treatments" and some who did not. Third, they by and large assess interventions that are feasible and realistic within the constraints of U.S. policy making. Schneider describes each intervention in detail, discussing its target population, experimental treatment, evaluation design, economic effects, and, finally, any effects on marriage or cohabitation. Overall, he finds little evidence that manipulating men's economic resources increased the likelihood that they would marry, though there are exceptions. For women, on the other hand, there is more evidence of positive effects.
引用
收藏
页码:155 / 178
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] LESSONS LEARNED FROM LITERATURE
    Takolander, Maria
    MEANJIN, 2010, 69 (03): : 108 - 116
  • [42] Lessons to be learned from periodontitis
    Janssen, Koen M. J.
    Vissink, Arjan
    de Smit, Menke J.
    Westra, Johanna
    Brouwer, Elisabeth
    CURRENT OPINION IN RHEUMATOLOGY, 2013, 25 (02) : 241 - 247
  • [43] The lessons learned from Orchidea
    Schiavoni, Flavio Luis
    Araujo, Joao Teixeira
    Silva Junior, Igino de Oliveira
    Freitas, Isabella de Melo
    DEBATES, 2019, (23): : 118 - 154
  • [44] LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE WAR
    TOWNSEND, JG
    OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE, 1947, 3 (04): : 366 - 375
  • [45] Lessons learned from Chikungunya
    Giovanni Rezza
    Retrovirology, 7
  • [46] Lessons learned from a MAN
    Nussbacher, H
    COMPUTER NETWORKS AND ISDN SYSTEMS, 1996, 28 (04): : 583 - 588
  • [47] Lessons learned from Xavier
    Simmons, R
    Fernandez, JL
    Goodwin, R
    Koenig, S
    O'Sullivan, J
    IEEE ROBOTICS & AUTOMATION MAGAZINE, 2000, 7 (02) : 33 - 39
  • [48] Lessons learned from the lived
    Ankeny, Laura J.
    JOURNAL OF GERONTOLOGICAL NURSING, 2007, 33 (03): : 54 - 56
  • [49] Lessons Learned from CORONET
    Clapp, G.
    Doverspike, R.
    Skoog, R.
    Strand, J.
    Von Lehmen, A.
    2010 CONFERENCE ON OPTICAL FIBER COMMUNICATION OFC COLLOCATED NATIONAL FIBER OPTIC ENGINEERS CONFERENCE OFC-NFOEC, 2010,
  • [50] Lessons Learned From PEPFAR
    Dybul, Mark
    JAIDS-JOURNAL OF ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROMES, 2009, 52 : S12 - S13