علي 14th December 2009 |
چرا ايران را جزو اين نمودار ها قرار نداده ايد |
Gorden wakamatsu! 8th December 2009 |
'Researcher' is quite a goofy character! heheh |
Puerto Rican 6th December 2009 |
HEY "GREG CAULFIELD" Puerto Rico is a country. Is sad we have ignorants like you in this world. |
G 15th November 2009 |
There is something wrong with Mr. Pavan Singh blaming Feminism as the cause of divorce in other countries. He needs education. And his comment smacks of male chauvinism, the disease that exists in most patriarchial societies.
Divorce is not a simplistic issue. |
Pavan Singh 11th November 2009 |
Countries where divorces are easily granted tend to have higher rates of divorce. And divorces are most easily granted in heavily feminized countries. Therefore, it's safe to conclude that feminism is bad for marriage and families. Also, in heavily feminized countries, women are the ones who initiate most of the divorces, and women are the ones who walk away the big winners. Therefore, it's entirely rasonable to conclude that women in these countries will not marry for love. Rather, they will marry simply because the law allows them to take advantage of men.
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GREG CAULFIELD 3rd November 2009 |
PUERTO RICO IS NOT A COUNTRY. |
Gus 1st October 2009 |
Statistics or not, everyone realizes that when women went on the rampage and took their clothes off in the developed world, the family foundations cracked, extending all the way to the government. A country's moral foundation is the basis of family life, which is in turn the pillar of society. Once that's busted, the government and institutions are affected. The whole society is now a bunch of illegitimates, drug addicts, felons, wacky psychos on medications, perverts. And their children will be worse.
There is your civilization. |
4 20th September 2009 |
123 |
berna 16th September 2009 |
According to divorce statistics , one out of five marriages lasts for 50 years and 50% of marriage ends in divorce. Obviously, US got the highest divorce rate. With the rampant divorce trend, it’s quite rare to find couples who’ve reached the maturity of their marriages. Today, divorce is granted for about 60 days, and spouses can claim for mind-boggling spousal and child support. |
Adu-Larbi Richard ,GHANA 16th September 2009 |
I am a final year student writing my project on the topic "The relationship between the choice of a partner, preparation towards marriage and marital sustenance" Could I please get information on the divorce rate in Ghana and Africa? |
Gaizkane 6th September 2009 |
Hi everybody!
I have to do a research paper on how divorce affects family relationships. I find the information given above pretty useful. The figures of divorce rate by country, could you let me how what the source is and when they were updated last, please?
If you thought that some other updated information could be useful for my paper, I would appreciate you letting me know.
Many thanks!! |
mike 24th August 2009 |
It all really depends on how much modern feminism has infected the country. Its absolutely laden in the US and parts of northern Europe, which explains the high divorce rates. |
Joby 24th August 2009 |
These statistics are utter nonsense. I need to know how many marriages end in divorce by country worldwide. The stats listed on this page do not say whether this is a yearly measure or lifetime measure. In other words does the US's 4.95 per 1000 people indicate this year of 2009? Does it mean that of 1000 people who got married or per 1000 people of population (which makes the statistic almost meaningless)? Please do a better job of marking these currently useless statistics.
Thanks. |
ellaxcy 17th August 2009 |
I am a student and am doing a project on the effects of divorce on children at the age between 14 and 17.The statistics of divorce between the years 2007 and 2009 according to their race in fiji.the divorce rate in Fiji. |
Maximus 30th July 2009 |
I am a student, I am writing a research paper for english, about effect of divorce on children. I want to know the divorce rate in Mongolia. |
Yasmin Mariska 18th July 2009 |
I need the divorce rate in Malaysia. Im doing a thesis on divorce and family crisis. If anyone could be of any help to me, please e-mail me at:
yasminmariska@yahoo.co.uk
i'd really appreciate it. thank you so much |
joe 2nd June 2009 |
I'm a student of the university of ghana and I would like to find out the divorce statistics in ghana? Can I get it today? |
Saram 5th May 2009 |
I am looking to compare India's rate relative to USA.
How can a statistician accuurately predict in regions where people may not record marriages or divorces? How about polygamous marriages- where allowed?
I was told by a Chinese citizen that in few areas in China a woman may marry two brothers in agrarian regions to have as field helpers? Please comment. |
Al (Malaysia) 5th March 2009 |
i want to know the malaysia divorce rate |
Crystal 14th May 2006 |
I am writing a paper for english and I need to know the divorce rate for the U.S. and also does anyone know where to find statistics on why people get divorcedand what it does to children? |
Chuck 16th December 2005 |
i'm looking for divorce rates by us states and by sections of the country |
micheal 3rd November 2005 |
i think these stats are of great help to me...thank you for providing it.... |
jimmy 31st July 2005 |
im to wasted to care |
Hazel 2nd May 2005 |
Can I get information on the divorce rate in Jamica |
Edria Murray Staff Editor 25th April 2005 |
In response to Missys: The divorce rate in Spain is 0.6 for every 1,000 people which amounts to 10.9% of all marriages ending in divorce. This rate is significantly lower than that of most other Western European countries. Factors which influence the divorce rate in Spain include:- The legal process required in order to obtain a divorce. In Spain this process involves legal separation during which the case for separation must be presented before a judge, a waiting period of at least one year after legal separation has been granted, reconcilliation attempts must be made and grounds for divorce must also be established. These legal processes are currently under review.
- The Catholic Church. 94% of Spainiards are members of the Catholic church which opposes divorce.
- Social Attitudes. Since divorce in Spain was legalised in 1981 the divorce rate has increased, however the social stigma of divorce still affects many people.
- Marriage rate - The marriage rate in Spain has declined from seven marriages per 1000 population in 1981 to 4.9 per 1000 today. This rate is lower than most European countries. As fewer people are getting married (Many are opting for a single life or common-law marriage) fewer divorces will result.
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Edria Murray Staff Editor 13th April 2005 |
In response to Liseanaga:
Divorce affects families and society in a number of ways. Every family and every divorce is different. The effects of divorce on children can range from mild to severe and from short-term to long-term.
Effects of divorce on children and the family concerned include:
- Health, behavioral, learning and emotional problems (either arising from the divorce or aggravated by it)
- Financial problems (including child support payments which are not made and child support payments made to a previous partner)
- Loss of family (including extended family)
- New family members (step-parents, step-brothers and sisters)
- Child abuse (this is more common in stepfamilies
- Crime, drug abuse, teen pregnancy and suicide (all are more common among children of divorced parents.
- Higher school drop-out rates.
- Religious worship often decreases or stops after the parents divorce.
As families are part of society, anything which affects a significant proportion of families will also affect society as a whole. In addition to this, costs associated with the effects of divorce such as social security, legal assistance (for custody, property and child support issues) and additional childcare are subsidised by the tax-payers in most developed nations. |
Ian Graham Staff Editor 28th February 2005 |
The divorce rate per 1000 people doesn’t tell the whole story about the prevalence of divorce in a country. Countries with more marriages will usually also have higher numbers of divorced people. To get an idea of how many marriages end in divorce, take a look at the number of divorces per 100 marriages, where Belgium tops the list at 59.8 divorces for every 100 marriages. Only six countries are in the top 20 of both divorces per 1000 people and divorces per 100 marriages. The United States and Russia are first and third, respectively, for divorce rates per 1000 people. But they are first and second in the number or marriages per 1000 people per year, and don’t appear in the top 20 of divorces per 1000 marriages. |