A clear preference for repartnering in the form of a cohabiting rather than a marital union has been noted by studies examining repartnering of lone parents (Böheim and Ermisch, 1998) as well as repartnering of all individuals (Ermisch and Francesconi, 2000; Wu and Schimmele, 2005; Skew, Evans and Gray, 2009). However, what is unknown for lone mothers, is how the effects of explanatory covariates may differ depending on the type of new partnership a lone mother enters. Moreover, the issue of reforming a prior union rather than forming a new partnership has rarely been addressed in any of the repartnering literature. This paper uses data collected by the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) for the years 1991-2008 and employs discrete-time multinomial logistic hazard models to simultaneously model entry into a) marriage and cohabitation, and b) reconciling and finding a new partner, for women that enter lone motherhood through the dissolution of a union.
Presented by:
Alexandra Skew (ISER)
Date & time:
November 24, 2010 1:00 pm - November 24, 2010 2:00 pm
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