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翻訳の問題を報告
Do you believe that marriages built on Western ideology aren't built on solid foundations?
What about Eastern ideology?
They had a big spike in the 60s and 70s due to women being able to divorce more easily since beforehand, it was almost all dependent on the husband wanting a divorce, not the wife. This would essentially trap women in marriages that were abusive.
When no-fault divorce started to become a thing, the divorce rate spike since now women could get out of relationships without having to prove some type of arbitrary standard. Since that little spike, it's gone down quite a bit and is roughly half of what it used to be.
And existing laws give them plenty of incentives to actually do it.
Globally?
Globally, in the nearly four decades between 1970 and 2008, the divorce rate has more than doubled, from 2.6 divorces for every 1,000 married people to 5.5. Those results are averaged across all the regions of the world that they studied.
The divorce rates for Northern Europe and Western Europe, including the Scandinavian countries, are all fairly high, ranging from 4.03 for France to 6.22 for Denmark and 6.55 for the UK. The exception is Ireland, with just 1.94 divorces for every 1,000 married people. Canada (5.25), Australia (5.61) and New Zealand (6.29) also have high rates of divorce.
Rates are fairly low for Southern Europe, ranging from .93 for Italy to 2.57 for Slovenia. They are mostly low in Latin American and Caribbean countries, with the big exceptions of Cuba (11.03), Puerto Rico (9.43), and the Dominican Republic (9.33).
Eastern Asia and Pacific nations are also on the low side, with divorce rates ranging from 1.13 for China to 3.97 for Hong Kong.
It's not about Eastern culture or Western culture or any culture in general. It's about the core foundational ideologies of each person in the relationship.
People are unique and more than just their surroundings. Just being part of a culture doesn't mean you're going to get along with everyone in that culture. Let alone that a marriage would work if being a part of a common culture is the only thread holding the couple together.
That's true, that's an excellent point.
Polyamory isn't taboo anymore and there are alternative relationship models to marriage and family.
https://www.datapandas.org/ranking/divorce-rates-by-country
Wow, the US is in the top 10.
Even in countries where its pretty hard to get, the rate is high as well