Explanations for changing divorce rates

Change in the law

In 1857 it was the only way to obtain a divorce was by a private act of parliament

Expensive and complicated and required friends in parliament so available to a small number of wealthy people

Over next 150 years, divorce became simpler, cheaper and available

Changes in the law allowed many more people the option of escaping from unhappy marriages via divorce

Not always coincided with changes in the law such as through the number of divorces doubled in 1971 after divorce from reform act were rising

Change in legislation may have simplifier reflected growing public demand for easier divorce

Sociologists suggest changes in society in any explanation of why the popularity of divorce has increased

Privatised Nuclear Family

Functionalist sociologists have tended to see high divorce rates as going hand on hand with a trend towards nuclear family

Parsons and Bales (1955) such as argue that modern American family has become structurally isolated from extended families

Less pressure from extended family for a couple to stay together and greater demands are placed such as central to the working of the nuclear family so social control agency and help prevent martial breakdown

For functionalist this is not a problem so high divorce rates are due to simply the price

Some critics, however, argue they are far from perfect

Anthropologists Leach (1967) argued that the nuclear family was the source of all our discounts so over loaded electrical circuits

Portrayed the relationship between husband and wife as life an over loaded circuit so having fulfilled all of the emotional needs of a couple so too much pressure

No surprise that nuclear family were a source of conflict for many with divorce one possible outcome

Higher Expectations of Marriage

Ronald Fletcher (1996) argued that higher divorce linked to higher value being placed as marriage such as couples come to expect more companionate relationship based on love

Evidence suggest that society attitudes towards divorce have shifted so both men and woman have higher expectations of marriage

More mature age probably after a period of cohabitation so strengthened marriage due to prelude to marriage allows couples the opportunity to agree any difficulties

Survey evidence from Beaujouna and Ni Bhrolchain suggest that a positive experience of cohabitation provides greater commitment

Channing Social Attitudes

Until the 1960s there was a strong stigma with divorce

More recently, people in Britain view divorce as normal and acceptable

Britain social attitudes survey 2006 found the 63% of respondents agreed divorce can be positive step towards a new life and 7% disagreed

25% agreed that It is not divorce that harms children but conflict between their parents and 7% disagreed

Decline of religious beliefs may also have contributed greater social acceptability of divorce so led to a necessary evil rather than a source of shame and social stigma

Colin Gibson (1994) argues Britain has undergone a process of secularisation so religious values have weakened in society including the influence of the traditional teaching about lifelong marriage

Deborah Chambers (2012) sees a range of evidence that within dominant public discourses as signs of moral decline such as lone parents are defined by the tabloid press as underserving scroungers widespread divorce leads to bad parenting, so stigma has disappeared

Individualisation and Reflexivity

Beck and Beck – Gernsheim (1995) like fletcher who said divorce has increased due to growing trend towards individualisation, so people have become more self-orientated

Focus on changing expectations of marriage rather than seeing these as shared values so nature of relationship is open to negotiation

Marriage leads to chaos of love as selflessness expected in love and marriage clashes with self-interest of individualism so traditional norms and values are no longer constrain people

Where people feel a relationship no longer serves their personal interest so less likely to maintain sense of commitment to others

Giddens (1992) has seen a growth in reflexivity in late modernity so individuals reflect on their personal lives

Divorce resulted from the transformation of intimacy when resulted from the gradual replacement of romantic love with confluent love

No longer see marriage as a lifelong commitment underpinned by romantic love so only maintain relationship as long as both are fulfilled

Desire the confluent version of love as they expect both temporary and fragile and look elsewhere

Argues woman have gained from this as they are no longer in unsatisfactory relationships so acknowledged the consequence been greater insecurity for individuals and higher rates

Changing Role of Woman

Prior to the divorce reform act most divorce petitions were started by men

65% of divorces are initiated by wives who are unhappy with some aspects of their marriages

Major differences with wives in 1960s and how they are more likely to go to work and less likely to be financially dependent husband

Evidence that the attitudes towards marriage have radically changed over generations such as wives in the past tolerated domestic violence as men’s emotional incompetence and inequalities in domestic division of labour

Woman today see such more behaviour as justifiable grounds for intimating divorce

Graham Allein and Graham Crowe (2001) argue that the changing positions of woman in society by influencing rise

In 1940s around 2/3 of divorce were men

Woman mostly didn’t have functional resources to fund divorce

In 2012, 65% were woman

Since 1970s far more married woman were employed

Most woman are more likely to be worse off after divorce

Lyon Prince Cooke and Vanessa Gash (2012) found no clear relationship between employment, earning and likelihood of divorce

Some feminists, large number of women seeking to escape marriage reflects problematic nature of marriage so supported by a small-scale study by Duncombe and Marsden (1995) where woman is dissatisfied with husband’s ability to take responsibility

Trends in Divorce since 1990s

The number of marriages has declined so fewer potential marriages so explains decline in total number of divorces which explains the decline in divorce per 1000 married couples

People are no longer waiting to marry as research suggests that couples who marry young and they have a higher chance of divorce so the increase of average age in marriage

Most couples have a trail period of cohabitation before marrying