The divorce rate continues to fall. These two articles offer differing but complementary explanations for why this is happening.
Ugh. It’s that time of year again. Let’s rip this Band-Aid off and get on with our lives.
Conflict is unavoidable when living with another person, but whether a fight tears down or builds up the relationship depends on how the couple behaves in its aftermath.
The number of Americans getting divorced plummeted last year, while the marriage rate also dropped precipitously as thousands of weddings were postponed or canceled, according to a new study.
One silver lining in an otherwise dark year is that most couples seem to be emerging from the crucible of COVID-19 not with weaker unions but stronger ones — and dreams for a stronger family future in the undoubtedly difficult days ahead.
Like me, my neighbor had begun having trouble with her marriage a couple of years before the pandemic. It wasn’t that the coronavirus had created the problems, but it had certainly crystallized them.
Changes in family roles reflect increased educational and occupational opportunities for women and greater gender equality within families. Fathers are expected to play an active role in parenting—and usually do—to a much greater degree than they did half a century ago.
Widespread social-distancing policies meant many couples had two choices, neither particularly appealing: They could smush together into close-quartered, 24-hours-a-day cohabitation, indefinitely, or be apart with limited in-person contact, indefinitely.
Same-sex spouses feel more satisfied with their partners than heterosexual ones. What’s the secret?
Millennials are going on fewer dates, having less sex and marrying later. Do they know something about love that the rest of us don’t?
Does an member of an unmarried same-sex couple have standing to pursue court-ordered parenting time in Tennessee?
What are parents to do when their parenting schedule is based on the school calendar and schools are closed for the rest of the academic year?
Does alimony in futuro always terminate when the recipient remarries in Tennessee?
While most Americans find it acceptable for unmarried couples to live together, even for those who don’t plan to get married, a narrow majority sees societal benefits in marriage.
Undisclosed Asset Invalidates Prenuptial Agreement in Brentwood, Tennessee Divorce: Walker v. Walker
What does “good faith” mean in the context of prenuptial agreements in Tennessee?
