article

Do marriages forget their past?: marital stability in post-Khmer Rouge Cambodia

Demography43 (1) • Published In 2006 • Pages: 99-125

By: Heuveline, Patrick, Poch, Bunnak.

Abstract
This paper assesses the impact of three main destabilizing factors on marital stability in Cambodia: the radical reformation of marriage under the Khmers Rouges (KR); the imbalanced gender ratio among marriageable adults resulting from gendered mortality during the KR regime; and, after decades of isolating from the West, a period of rapid social change. Although there is evidence of declining marital stability in the most recent period, marriages contracted under the KR appear as stable as adjacent marriage cohorts. These findings suggest that the conditions under which spouses were initially paired matter less for marital stability than does their contemporaneous environment.
Subjects
Basis of marriage
Regulation of marriage
Mode of marriage
Arranging a marriage
Aftermath of combat
Research and development
Termination of marriage
External relations
Residence
Household
Family relationships
Revelation and divination
Priesthood
Ingroup antagonisms
Miscellaneous government activities
Labor supply and employment
Peacemaking
Celibacy
Rule of descent
Acculturation and culture contact
culture
Cambodians
HRAF PubDate
2012
Region
Asia
Sub Region
Southeast Asia
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Anthropologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Teferi Abate Adem; 2012
Field Date
2000
Coverage Date
1805-2006
Coverage Place
Cambodia
Notes
Patrick Heuveline and Bunnak Poch
Includes bibliographical references (p. 123-125)
LCCN
64009434
LCSH
Khmers