Cohabitees are far more likely to experience domestic violence than married people, according to a new report. The study, Families in Ireland, reveals that, although cohabiting couples comprise only 14 per cent of all couples, 31 per cent of all domestic violence orders are issued to cohabiting partners.
In contrast, while 86pc of couples are married, they account for just 55 per cent of domestic violence orders. Therefore people who live together are proportionately far more likely to suffer domestic violence than married people.
The report, commissioned by the Department of Social and Family Affairs, confirms the findings of studies from other jurisdictions, which show that cohabitation is the family form most prone to domestic violence.
The report confirmed that the Irish rate of marital breakdown has increased fivefold since 1986 although this is still far lower than in countries like Britain and America.
The report also suggests that cohabitation, while it has increased significantly, “doesn't appear to be developing as a major alternative to marriage”. Instead, it points out that cohabitation “is more often either a transient arrangement that dissolves or a stage on the road to marriage”.
The study confirms that there has been a dramatic increase in the number of children being raised in single parent families. By 2006, it says, 17.6 per cent of children were being raised by lone parents.
Launching the report, Minister Mary Hanafin said that it showed there was “a clear trend, contrary to common opinion, that family life was alive and well”. This was supported, she added, by the findings that there were more marriages taking place and a lower divorce level compared with other countries.
02/12/08
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