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Infidelity statistics & facts

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Unmarried couples with children. Internet infidelity and its correlates - Swinburne Research Bank : Open Access Repository. Table of Contents — October 2008, 16 (4) — The Family Journal. "Oops, I did it Again!": Impulsiveness in Infidelity. The Relationship Between Self-Worth and Marital Infidelity: A Pilot Study — The Family Journal. So, What Did You Do Last Night? The Economics of Infidelity - Elmslie - 2008 - Kyklos. Adultery: 101 Reasons Not to Cheat. Sexual Infidelity Among Married and Cohabiting Americans - Treas - 2004 - Journal of Marriage and Family. Adultery in Post-war England — Hist Workshop J. Claire LanghamerClaire Langhamer is a senior lecturer in history at the University of Sussex. She is the author of Women's Leisure in England, 1920–1960 (2000) and is currently completing a book on love, courtship and commitment in mid twentieth-century England. Recent histories of twentieth-century heterosexual behaviour have tended to place the practices of young people centre-stage in accounts of social change.

Trends in premarital intercourse have been presented as evidence of changing sexual mores: the varied experiences of married people, beyond the realm of fertility, have less often been interrogated. Yet in the years after the Second World War, extended access to fault-based divorce, a state-sponsored determination to remake family life and an increasing emphasis upon the relational aspects of marriage ensured that marital infidelity was prominent in public discussions of sexual and emotional life. Www.fed.cuhk.edu.hk/~lchang/material/Evolutionary/Parental/susceptibility to infidelity-jrp-1997.pdf. Www.valt.helsinki.fi/staff/haavioma/artik-pdf/atkins_etal2001.pdf.

Suspicious wives best at spying on their spouses by checking texts and emails. By Andy Dolan Updated: 09:03 GMT, 24 May 2010 Spying: Woman are better at using technology to check up on their husband's than men, researchers claim Men have long maintained that they're better at mastering technology than women are. However, there's one field where they appear to have fallen far behind. Research shows that suspicious wives are almost twice as likely as their husbands to spy on their spouse's online activities.

This suggests that, when it comes to snooping on their partner, they are quicker to embrace the power of computers and mobile phones. According to the survey of almost 1,000 married middle-aged couples, 14 per cent of the wives secretly read their husbands' emails, while 13 per cent admitted poring over their beloved's text messages. Of the husbands questioned, only eight per cent admitted reading their wives' emails, while seven per cent had checked text messages sent to their partner. Survey Final.pdf. Cheating and infidelity statistics | The Ashley Madison Diaries.