Volume 21 - Article 28 | Pages 843–878  

Assortative matching among same-sex and different-sex couples in the United States, 1990-2000

By Christine Schwartz, Nikki Graf

Abstract

Same-sex couples are less likely to be homogamous than different-sex couples on a variety of characteristics, including race/ethnicity, age, and education. This study confirms results from previous studies using 1990 U.S. census data and extends previous analyses to examine changes from 1990 to 2000. We find that same-sex male couples are generally the least likely to resemble one another, followed by same-sex female couples, different-sex cohabitors, and different-sex married couples. Despite estimated growth in the numbers of same-sex couples in the population and the increasing acceptance of non-traditional unions, we find little evidence of diminishing differences in the resemblance of same- and different-sex couples between 1990 and 2000, with the possible exception of educational homogamy.

Author's Affiliation

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research

Age-heterogamous partnerships: Prevalence and partner differences by marital status and gender composition
Volume 50 - Article 23    | Keywords: age heterogamy, assortative mating, cohabitation, marriage, same-sex couples, unions

Differences in occupational homogamy by race, ethnicity, and national origin: A social mobility strategy for Asian Americans
Volume 48 - Article 18    | Keywords: assortative mating, immigrants, integration, occupation, racial/ethnic differences

Stability and outcome of interracial cohabitation before and after transitions to marriage
Volume 46 - Article 33    | Keywords: interracial unions, marital dissolution, premarital cohabitation, race/ethnicity

Do same-sex unions dissolve more often than different-sex unions? Methodological insights from Colombian data on sexual behavior
Volume 44 - Article 48    | Keywords: Colombia, dissolution, divorce, family, same-sex couples

A counterfactual choice approach to the study of partner selection
Volume 44 - Article 22    | Keywords: assortative mating, educational heterogamy, intermarriage, methodology, racial exogamy