Volume 44 - Article 48 | Pages 1149–1164
Do same-sex unions dissolve more often than different-sex unions? Methodological insights from Colombian data on sexual behavior
By Fernando Ruiz Vallejo, Diederik Boertien
Abstract
Background: Conclusions about differences in union dissolution rates between same-sex couples and different-sex couples vary across studies and countries. Previous research identifies same-sex couples solely using information on the sex of partners.
Objective: To investigate how the measures used to identify same-sex couples affect conclusions regarding differences in dissolution rates between different-sex and same-sex unions in the stigmatized context of Colombia.
Methods: We use rich retrospective data from the Colombian DHS 2015 on the duration of 63,462 unions, including 1,051 same-sex unions. An important feature of this survey is that respondents are also asked about their sexual behavior.
Results: Similar to previous studies on the United States, estimates solely based on the reported sex of partners show that cohabiting same-sex couples are as likely to separate as cohabiting different-sex couples in Colombia. However, excluding same-sex unions of persons who reported never having had sex with someone of the same sex, same-sex unions are considerably more likely to end in separation than different-sex unions.
Conclusions: The same-sex unions of persons who report having had sex with someone of the same sex are more likely to end in separation than different-sex unions in Colombia.
Contribution: We show how substantive conclusions about the relative stability of same-sex unions depend on how same-sex unions are identified. To reduce the influence of possible miscoding on conclusions we recommend combining various measures to identify same-sex unions.
Author’s Affiliation
- Fernando Ruiz Vallejo - Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia EMAIL
- Diederik Boertien - Centre d'Estudis Demogràfics (CED), Spain EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
            Lowest low fertility in Spain: Insights from the 2018 Spanish Fertility Survey
            
                Volume 51 - Article 19
        
            Pathways and obstacles to parenthood among women in same-sex couples in Spain
            
                Volume 50 - Article 35
        
            Why does women’s education stabilize marriages? The role of marital attraction and barriers to divorce
            
                Volume 38 - Article 41
        
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
            Attitudes toward child well-being in diverse families across Europe
            
                Volume 53 - Article 11
                | Keywords: 
                    attitudes,
                    children,
                    Europe,
                    European Social Survey,
                    family,
                    gender,
                    same-sex couples,
                    single parenthood,
                    stepfamily
        
            Modifying model life tables to derive mortality curves for countries with excess mortality
            
                Volume 53 - Article 2
                | Keywords: 
                    armed conflict,
                    Colombia,
                    homicide,
                    life expectancy,
                    probability of dying,
                    road traffic accidents,
                    violence,
                    war
        
            Unmarried motherhood and infant health: The role of  intimate partner violence in Colombia
            
                Volume 52 - Article 6
                | Keywords: 
                    cohabitation,
                    Colombia,
                    infant health,
                    intimate partner violence,
                    low birthweight,
                    partnership status
        
            Decriminalization of adultery likely changed women’s views on divorce following spousal infidelity in South Korea
            
                Volume 52 - Article 4
                | Keywords: 
                    adultery law,
                    divorce,
                    Korean Longitudinal Survey of Women’s Families,
                    marriage law,
                    South Korea
        
            Studying individuals in same-sex couples using longitudinal administrative data from Canadian tax records: Opportunities and challenges
            
                Volume 52 - Article 2
                | Keywords: 
                    administrative data,
                    Canada,
                    Longitudinal Administrative Databank,
                    same-sex couples,
                    sexual orientation,
                    sexual orientation earnings gap,
                    tax data
        
Cited References: 32
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar