First union formation in urban Burkina Faso: Competing relationship transitions to marriage or cohabitation

<b>Background</b>: In several African cities the prevalence of unmarried cohabitation among youth has risen considerably. Because of its potentially negative implications for women and their children, in some countries cohabitation has even become a matter of heated public debate and pol...

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Main Author: Anne-Emmanuèle Calvès
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research 2016-03-01
Series:Demographic Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol34/15/
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spelling doaj-91b506e6b44447fe8057d86368158dfb2020-11-24T21:25:07ZengMax Planck Institute for Demographic ResearchDemographic Research1435-98712016-03-01341510.4054/DemRes.2016.34.152900First union formation in urban Burkina Faso: Competing relationship transitions to marriage or cohabitationAnne-Emmanuèle Calvès0Universit&#xe9; de Montr&#xe9;al<b>Background</b>: In several African cities the prevalence of unmarried cohabitation among youth has risen considerably. Because of its potentially negative implications for women and their children, in some countries cohabitation has even become a matter of heated public debate and policy concern. In contrast to industrialized countries, however, the choice between marriage and cohabitation in the region has attracted little attention. <b>Objective</b>: The purpose of the study is to explore the rising phenomenon of young, unmarried, cohabiting couples in Ouagadougou, the capital city of Burkina Faso, and to evaluate how characteristics of both partners involved in a dating relationship affect the choice between marriage and non-marital cohabitation when forming a first union. <b>Methods</b>: Based on life history data including unique relationship biographies, the study takes a competing risks approach to examine relationship transitions to a first marriage or unmarried cohabitation. <b>Results</b>: A long spell of unmarried cohabitation is common among youth in Ouagadougou today, and children's exposure to cohabitation is high. While occupation, especially male occupation, is a crucial determinant of entry into union - having a similar effect on marriage and cohabitation risks - partners' educational attainment, ethnic endogamy, and religion significantly affect the choice between marriage and cohabitation. <b>Conclusions</b>: Ideational changes rather than economic ones motivate youth to choose cohabitation instead of marriage. Cohabitation in Ouagadougou has not become the "poor man's wedding", as Oppenheimer's hypothesis would suggest, but rather the preferred choice of dating couples who are more willing and able to distance themselves from familial expectations and marital norms.http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol34/15/African familiesBurkina Fasocohabitationcompeting analysisFine and Gray modelmarriageOppenheimer's hypothesisrelationship processesunion formationyouth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anne-Emmanuèle Calvès
spellingShingle Anne-Emmanuèle Calvès
First union formation in urban Burkina Faso: Competing relationship transitions to marriage or cohabitation
Demographic Research
African families
Burkina Faso
cohabitation
competing analysis
Fine and Gray model
marriage
Oppenheimer's hypothesis
relationship processes
union formation
youth
author_facet Anne-Emmanuèle Calvès
author_sort Anne-Emmanuèle Calvès
title First union formation in urban Burkina Faso: Competing relationship transitions to marriage or cohabitation
title_short First union formation in urban Burkina Faso: Competing relationship transitions to marriage or cohabitation
title_full First union formation in urban Burkina Faso: Competing relationship transitions to marriage or cohabitation
title_fullStr First union formation in urban Burkina Faso: Competing relationship transitions to marriage or cohabitation
title_full_unstemmed First union formation in urban Burkina Faso: Competing relationship transitions to marriage or cohabitation
title_sort first union formation in urban burkina faso: competing relationship transitions to marriage or cohabitation
publisher Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
series Demographic Research
issn 1435-9871
publishDate 2016-03-01
description <b>Background</b>: In several African cities the prevalence of unmarried cohabitation among youth has risen considerably. Because of its potentially negative implications for women and their children, in some countries cohabitation has even become a matter of heated public debate and policy concern. In contrast to industrialized countries, however, the choice between marriage and cohabitation in the region has attracted little attention. <b>Objective</b>: The purpose of the study is to explore the rising phenomenon of young, unmarried, cohabiting couples in Ouagadougou, the capital city of Burkina Faso, and to evaluate how characteristics of both partners involved in a dating relationship affect the choice between marriage and non-marital cohabitation when forming a first union. <b>Methods</b>: Based on life history data including unique relationship biographies, the study takes a competing risks approach to examine relationship transitions to a first marriage or unmarried cohabitation. <b>Results</b>: A long spell of unmarried cohabitation is common among youth in Ouagadougou today, and children's exposure to cohabitation is high. While occupation, especially male occupation, is a crucial determinant of entry into union - having a similar effect on marriage and cohabitation risks - partners' educational attainment, ethnic endogamy, and religion significantly affect the choice between marriage and cohabitation. <b>Conclusions</b>: Ideational changes rather than economic ones motivate youth to choose cohabitation instead of marriage. Cohabitation in Ouagadougou has not become the "poor man's wedding", as Oppenheimer's hypothesis would suggest, but rather the preferred choice of dating couples who are more willing and able to distance themselves from familial expectations and marital norms.
topic African families
Burkina Faso
cohabitation
competing analysis
Fine and Gray model
marriage
Oppenheimer's hypothesis
relationship processes
union formation
youth
url http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol34/15/
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