The United States has the highest family fragmentation rates in the industrial world. Nonmarital birth rates for the nation as a whole are 40%, with proportions dramatically higher in many communities as defined by race, ethnicity, or geography. Divorce rates, while moderating in recent decades, are still estimated at about 40% for first marriages and 50% for second ones. Together, this fragmentation impacts millions of children as well as adults, leading to educational, economic, and other losses that in turn lead to lower social mobility and deepening class divisions. In Broken Bonds, Mitch Pearlstein explores the declining state of the American family and what its disintegration means for our future. Based on candid interviews with forty leading family experts across the political spectrum - from Stephanie Coontz, to Heather Mac Donald - Pearlstein ruminates on the political, social, and spiritual fallout of this trend. In honest and frank conversations, Pearlstein and his interviewees fearlessly diagnose the problems that many have been too timid to explore and suggest ways to reverse these trends that threaten our social fabric.
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Broken Bonds: What Family Fragmentation Means for America's Future
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Broken Bonds: What Family Fragmentation Means for America's Future
Mitch Pearlstein, PhD, is founder emeritus of the Center of the American Experiment, a think tank for which he served as president for nearly twenty-five years. His previous books includeFrom Family Collapse to America's Decline: The Educational, Economic, and Social Costs of Family Fragmentation(Rowman & Littlefield, 2011) andBroken Bonds: What Family Fragmentation Means for America's Future(Rowman & Littlefield, 2014). He lives in Eden Prairie, Minnesota.
Broken Bonds makes this much clear: Family fragmentation is a problem of serious magnitude, one that is not going away anytime soon, and thus one that will require great patience and persistence to tackle. If the first step to addressing family fragmentation is acknowledging that it is a problem, then Pearlstein laudably takes us closer to that public consensus. He does this effectively because of the spectrum of his respondents and the gold mine of material that resulted. And yet there is so much more to do.
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