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Journal of Family Issues
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People's Reasons for Divorcing

Gender, Social Class, the Life Course, and Adjustment

Paul R. Amato

The Pennsylvania State University

Denise Previti

The Pennsylvania State University

We used national panel data collected between 1980 and 1997 to classify 208 people's open-ended responses to a question on why their marriages ended in divorce. Infidelity was the most commonly reported cause, followed by incompatibility, drinking or drug use, and growing apart. People's specific reasons for divorcing varied with gender, social class, and life course variables. Former husbands and wives were more likely to blame their ex-spouses than themselves for the problems that led to the divorce. Former husbands and wives claimed, however, that women were more likely to have initiated the divorce. People who attributed the cause of the divorce to the relationship itself, rather than to internal (self) or external factors, tended to have the best postdivorce adjustment.

Key Words: divorce • gender • life course • social class

Journal of Family Issues, Vol. 24, No. 5, 602-626 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/0192513X03254507


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