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Daniel T. Lichter

Daniel T. Lichter

· Ferris Family Professor of Policy Analysis and Management, Emeritus and Professor Emeritus of SociologyVerified

Cornell University · Sociology

Active 1979–2024

h-index77
Citations19.0k
Papers28621 last 5y
Funding$8.2M
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Research topics

  • Sociology
  • Political Science
  • Gender studies
  • Demographic economics
  • Law
  • Economics
  • Development economics

Selected publications

  • Cohabitation and Marriage: Complexity and Diversity in Union‐Formation Patterns

    Journal of Marriage and Family · 2020 · 320 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Sociology
    • Political Science
    • Sociology

    Abstract Nonmarital cohabitation and marriage are now fundamentally linked, a fact that is routinely reflected in current research on union formation. Unprecedented changes in the timing, duration, and sequencing of intimate co‐residential relationships have made the study of traditional marriage far more complex today than in the past. It is now clear that a white, middle‐class, American‐centric research template has become increasingly anachronistic. In this review article, we begin by providing an overview of contemporary theory, empirical approaches, and demographic trends in cohabitation and marriage, focusing primarily on the United States, but also distinguishing the U.S. from patterns found in other high‐income societies, including European countries, Canada, Australia, and in East Asia. We place the spotlight on the causes and consequences of union transitions. We identify the commonalities between cohabitation and marriage, but also key differences that are expressed unevenly across different populations and cultural groups. The rise in nonmarital cohabitation has upended conventional theoretical models and measurement approaches to the study of traditional marriage, complicating matters but also reinvigorating family scholarship on union formation and its implications for partners, children, and society.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

Education

  • PhD, Sociology

    University of Wisconsin Madison

    1981
  • MS, Sociology

    Iowa State University

    1977
  • BS, Sociology and Rural Sociology

    South Dakota State University

    1975

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