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Marriage Delayed and Equalized: Effects of Early U.S. Compulsory Schooling Laws on Marital Patterns by Race

Rauscher, Emily
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Abstract
Identifying a causal relationship between education and marital status poses methodological challenges. Using regression discontinuity analyses of U.S. Census data from 1910 and 1930, I estimate effects of early U.S. compulsory schooling laws on marital patterns by gender and race. Results from 1910 suggest compulsory laws had heterogeneous effects by race and gender, reducing the likelihood of being married only among non-white men. Results from 1930 suggest compulsory schooling decreased the racial gap in likelihood of being married and in age at first marriage by at least 24%. Contemporary implications include potential benefits of extended compulsory schooling for racial equality.
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Date
2017-06-22
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
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Keywords
Education, Inequality, Marriage, Race, Compulsory schooling
Citation
Rauscher, Emily. "Marriage Delayed and Equalized: Effects of Early US Compulsory Schooling Laws on Marital Patterns by Race." The Sociological Quarterly (2017): 1-23.
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