Abstract
The purpose of this study is to use family stress theory to examine the relationship between age at first marriage and marital quality and divorce. Age at marriage continues to increase and the demographics keep changing. Past research suggests that early age at marriage has been a contributing factor to divorce risk. Marital quality outcomes can also give us an idea of how well couples are faring in their marriages. This study employs a sample from a longitudinal, nationally representative investigation (CREATE), which has followed newlywed couples since 2016. The sub-sample for this study comes from wave one and includes 1,811 women and 1,649 men. Using ordinary least squares (OLS) regression, I analyzed sixteen marital stability and quality outcomes and age at first marriage models for men and women separately. Overall, there were only a few, weak, significant relationships between age at marriage and marital stability and quality outcomes, suggesting that age at first may not be a particularly robust indicator of marital success, perhaps because strong norms for the right age to marry have diminished and couples who marry early do so because they want to rather than feeling they have to. Therefore, practitioners can help couples focus on more significant factors than age for marital success.
Degree
MS
College and Department
Family, Home, and Social Sciences; Family Life
Rights
https://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Jones, Anne Marie Wright, "Age at First Marriage and Marital Success in the Context of Stress Theory: An Updated Investigation with a Longitudinal, Nationally Representative Sample" (2023). Theses and Dissertations. 10192.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/10192
Date Submitted
2023-12-11
Document Type
Thesis
Handle
http://hdl.lib.byu.edu/1877/etd13030
Keywords
age at first marriage, family stress theory, marital quality, marital stability, divorce
Language
english