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Social Origin and Parental and Offspring Union Dissolution: Cues from Sibling Correlations

Linus Andersson

Social Origin and Parental and Offspring Union Dissolution: Cues from Sibling Correlations

Linus Andersson
Katso/Avaa
INVEST-Working-Paper-Social Origin and Parental and Offspring Union Dissolution.pdf (1.128Mb)
Lataukset: 

Suomen akatemia
doi:10.31235/osf.io/erkmq
URI
https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/erkmq/
Näytä kaikki kuvailutiedot
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042713748
Tiivistelmä

This paper estimates the size of the effect of parental union
dissolution on offspring union dissolution, as a share of the sum of all
social origin factors. A large literature has documented a positive
correlation between divorce and separation among parents and their
children. Parental union dissolution is one out of several aspects of
social origin that is associated with union dissolution. It is difficult
to contrast the relative impact of parental union dissolution to other
aspects of social origin because many apects of social origin are
unobservable. Swedish administrative data for the 1960 to 1965 birth
cohorts that cover the individuals’ life events until 2018 is used to
estimate sibling correlations in divorce and childbearing union
dissolution, adjusting for parental union dissolution. The variance in
union dissolution attributable to factors shared by siblings ranged from
6% to 13%. Parental union dissolution and factors associated with
parental union dissolution explained between 15% and 28% of this
variance. Sister correlations are greater than brother correlations, and
sibling correlations of childbearing union dissolution are higher than
sibling correlations of divorce. It is pertinent to estimate the total
effect of all social background factors on offspring union dissolution.
It is likewise of interest to specify the share of all social background
effects that are constituted by factors caused by or correlated
specifically with parental union dissolution. Sibling correlations can
be a useful tool for quantifying these relationships.

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