Families Under Stress
An Assessment of Data, Theory, and Research on Marriage and Divorce in the Military
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https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7249/MG599OSDAuthor(s)
Karney, Benjamin R.
Crown, John S.
Language
EnglishAbstract
The authors estimate marriage and marital dissolution trends from 1996 to 2005, and the effects of recent deployments on risk of ending a marriage. Marital dissolution rates across services and components are currently similar to those seen in 1996, when the demands on the military were measurably lower. Service members who were deployed had a lower risk of subsequently ending their marriages than those who did not deploy or deployed fewer days.
Keywords
Management & Organizational BehaviorDOI
10.7249/MG599OSDISBN
9780833042736, 9780833041456Publisher
RAND CorporationPublication date and place
2007Classification
Personnel and human resources management
Working patterns and practices