Fichier de travail (INPUT) : ./SEGMENTATION/seg_1-28.txt
Encodage utilisé (INPUT) : utf-8
Forme recherchée : 婚姻|mariage|marriage
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- Ligne n°72 : Marriage Has Become a Trophy
- Ligne n°87 : The decline of marriage is upon us. Or, at least, that’s what the
Ligne n°88 : zeitgeist would have us believe. In 2010, when Time magazine and the ...
Ligne n°89 : ... Pew Research Center famously asked Americans whether they thought- Ligne n°90 : marriage was becoming obsolete, 39 percent said yes. That was up from
Ligne n°91 : 28 percent when Time asked the question in 1978. Also, since 2010, the ...
Ligne n°98 : ... conventional wisdom: A clear majority of same-sex couples who are- Ligne n°99 : living together are now married. Same-sex marriage was illegal in every
Ligne n°100 : state until Massachusetts legalized it in 2004, and it did not become ...- Ligne n°109 : The move toward marriage has not been driven by young gay and lesbian
Ligne n°110 : couples rushing to the altar. In both the year before and the year ...
Ligne n°111 : ... after Obergefell, only one out of seven people whom the Census Bureau- Ligne n°112 : classified as in a same-sex marriage was age 30 or younger, according
Ligne n°113 : to calculations I’ve done based on the bureau’s American Community ...
Ligne n°114 : ... Survey. In fact, half of them were age 50 or older. The only way that- Ligne n°115 : could have happened, given that same-sex marriage has been legal for
Ligne n°116 : less than 15 years, is if large numbers of older same-sex couples who ...
Ligne n°131 : ... Yet the emphasis on love and companionship is not enough to explain the- Ligne n°132 : same-sex marriage boom. Without doubt, most of the middle-aged same-sex
Ligne n°133 : couples who have married of late already had love and ...
Ligne n°134 : ... companionship—otherwise they would not have still been together. So why- Ligne n°135 : marry now? Marriage became for them a public marker of their successful
Ligne n°136 : union, providing them the opportunity to display their love and ...
Ligne n°138 : ... desire to claim a right so long denied, but that only further- Ligne n°139 : underlines the way in which marriage today signals to the wider
Ligne n°140 : community the success of a long-standing relationship. ...
Ligne n°150 : ... many of the same-sex couples who have married recently, are starting- Ligne n°151 : their marriages later in their lives. According to the Census Bureau,
Ligne n°152 : the median age at first marriage—the age at which half of all marriages ...
Ligne n°151 : ... their marriages later in their lives. According to the Census Bureau,- Ligne n°152 : the median age at first marriage—the age at which half of all marriages
- Ligne n°152 : the median age at first marriage—the age at which half of all marriages
Ligne n°153 : occur—was 27.4 for women and 29.5 for men in 2017. That’s higher than ...
Ligne n°158 : ... then had children. (I scandalized my parents by living with my future- Ligne n°159 : wife before I married her.) Now marriage tends to come after most of
Ligne n°160 : these markers are attained. ...- Ligne n°162 : The main distinction in marriage patterns today is between Americans
Ligne n°163 : who have attained at least a bachelor’s degree and those with less ...
Ligne n°171 : ... had less impact on when, whether, and for how long they married. Today,- Ligne n°172 : marriage is a much more central part of family life among the college
Ligne n°173 : educated. ...- Ligne n°175 : Nevertheless, the last-step view of marriage is common across all
Ligne n°176 : educational groups in United States. And it is being carried to the nth ...
Ligne n°179 : ... starts to have children, or even after all of their children are born.- Ligne n°180 : The median age at first marriage in Norway is an astounding 39 for men
Ligne n°181 : and 38 for women, according to a recent estimate—six to eight years ...
Ligne n°182 : ... higher than the median age at first childbirth. In Sweden, one study- Ligne n°183 : found that 17 percent of all marriages had occurred after the couple
Ligne n°184 : had had two children. Why do they even bother to marry at such a late ...
Ligne n°185 : ... stage of their unions? Norwegians told researchers that they view- Ligne n°186 : marriage as a way to demonstrate love and commitment and to celebrate
Ligne n°187 : with relatives and friends the family they have constructed. This is ...
Ligne n°187 : ... with relatives and friends the family they have constructed. This is- Ligne n°188 : capstone marriage: The wedding is the last brick put in place to
Ligne n°189 : finally complete the building of the family. ...- Ligne n°191 : Americans have tended to rank marriage as more important than Europeans
Ligne n°192 : do for as long as there have been Americans. The transatlantic ...
Ligne n°193 : ... difference extends back to the Calvinist settlers who believed in the- Ligne n°194 : exalted place of marriage found in Martin Luther’s theology. And the
Ligne n°195 : difference has persisted: Between 2005 and 2009, the World Values ...
Ligne n°196 : ... Survey asked samples of people in various Western countries whether- Ligne n°197 : they agreed with the statement, “Marriage is an outdated institution.”
Ligne n°198 : Just 12.6 percent of Americans agreed, which is smaller than the ...
Ligne n°203 : ... Justice Anthony Kennedy reflected this high American regard for- Ligne n°204 : marriage when he wrote for the majority of the Court in Obergefell,
Ligne n°205 : “Rising from the most basic human needs, marriage is essential to our ...
Ligne n°204 : ... marriage when he wrote for the majority of the Court in Obergefell,- Ligne n°205 : “Rising from the most basic human needs, marriage is essential to our
Ligne n°206 : most profound hopes and aspirations.” Although many on the cultural and ...
Ligne n°207 : ... political left applauded the Court’s decision, Kennedy’s language was- Ligne n°208 : quite traditionalist. In fact, plenty of Americans view marriage as, at
Ligne n°209 : best, one of many lifestyle choices and, at worst, a deeply flawed ...- Ligne n°214 : The alternative visions are far from replacing marriage. It is an open
Ligne n°215 : question, however, how much longer marriage will continue to dominate ...
Ligne n°214 : ... The alternative visions are far from replacing marriage. It is an open- Ligne n°215 : question, however, how much longer marriage will continue to dominate
Ligne n°216 : American family life. According to the General Social Survey, a ...
Ligne n°220 : ... percent in 1994 to 57 percent in 2012, the last time the question was- Ligne n°221 : asked. Moreover, the material foundations of marriage have weakened.
Ligne n°222 : America is well past the heyday of the farm family in which a husband ...
Ligne n°223 : ... and wife united in labor and raised children to help work the land.- Ligne n°224 : Marriage seems to operate best today for parents who pool two incomes
Ligne n°225 : and invest heavily in their children’s development. Yet these ...
Ligne n°226 : ... investments could be made by parents in long-term cohabiting- Ligne n°227 : relationships. The dominance of marriage may simply be due to what the
Ligne n°228 : sociologist William Ogburn called “cultural lag”: the tendency of ...
Ligne n°233 : ... choose to marry. Sometime soon, the backlog of same-sex couples wishing- Ligne n°234 : to marry will be depleted. At that point, marriage rates among same-sex
Ligne n°235 : couples will depend largely on what younger people in recently formed ...
Ligne n°237 : ... different-sex couples are doing: live together in cohabiting- Ligne n°238 : relationships, postpone marriage, and ultimately choose marriage less
- Ligne n°238 : relationships, postpone marriage, and ultimately choose marriage less
Ligne n°239 : frequently than their parents’ generation did. If that happens, the ...
Ligne n°239 : ... frequently than their parents’ generation did. If that happens, the- Ligne n°240 : rate of same-sex marriage will slow. But it will surely persist—more,
Ligne n°241 : to be sure, as a common last step into adulthood than as a first. ...