Marriage is increasingly viewed as a relationship in which individuals seek personal fulfilment, and this encourages couples to divorce if they do not find it
Women's increased financial independence has made them less financially dependent on their husbands and therefore freer to end an unsatisfactory marriage
Feminists argue that married women today bear a dual burden of paid work and domestic labour, creating a new source of conflict between husbands and wives
Modernity and individualisation have made relationships more fragile, as individuals become unwilling to remain with a partner if the relationship fails to deliver personal fulfilment
Sociological views on the effects of a high divorce rate
The New Right see it as undesirable because it undermines marriage and the traditional nuclear family
Feminists see it as desirable because it shows women breaking free from patriarchal oppression
Postmodernists and the individualisation thesis see it as showing individuals' freedom to choose to end a relationship when it no longer meets their needs
The New Right see it as undesirable because it undermines marriage and the traditional nuclear family, which they regard as vital to social stability
Feminists see it as desirable because it shows that women are breaking free from the oppression of the patriarchal nuclear family
Postmodernists and the individualisation thesis see it as showing that individuals now have the freedom to choose to end a relationship when it no longer meets their needs
The New Right believe a high divorce rate creates a growing underclass of welfare-dependent female lone parents who are a burden on the state and it leaves boys without the adult male role model they need. They believe it also results in poorer health and educational outcomes for children
Rationalists argue that a high divorce rate is not necessarily a threat to marriage as a social institution, but simply the result of people's higher expectations of marriage today. The high rate of re-marriage shows people's continuing commitment to the idea of marriage
The personal life perspective accepts that divorce can cause problems, such as financial difficulties (especially for women) and lack of daily contact between children and non-resident parents. However, they argue that divorce has become normalised and that family life can adapt to it without disintegrating
Reasons for a fall in the number of first marriages
Changing attitudes to marriage - there is less pressure to marry and more freedom for individuals to choose the type of relationship they want
Secularisation - the churches' declining influence means people feel freer to choose not to marry
Declining stigma attached to alternatives to marriage - cohabitation, remaining single, and having children outside marriage are all now widely regarded as acceptable
Changes in the position of women - with better educational and career prospects, many women are now less economically dependent on men
Fear of divorce - with the rising divorce rate, some may be put off marrying because they see the increased likelihood of marriage ending in divorce