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===North America=== ====United States==== {{Main|Divorce in the United States}}The [[Divorce demography#Crude divorce rate|crude divorce rate]] in 2022 in the United States is 2.3 divorces. This is significantly lower than prior years, such as those in 2001 where 4.1 divorces were recorded. These recent findings suggest a downward trend of the number of people dissolving their marriage. However, divorce rates range from state to state. The [[National Center for Health Statistics]] reports that wives, with children present, filed for divorce in approximately two-thirds of cases from 1975 to 1988 in the U.S. For example, 71.4% of the cases were filed by women in 1975 and 65% were filed by women in 1988. It is estimated that upwards of 95% of divorces in the U.S. are "uncontested", because the two parties are able to come to an agreement without a hearing (either with or without lawyers/mediators/collaborative counsel) about the property, children, and support issues. In 2000, the divorce rate reached its peak at 40% but has since slowly declined. In 2001, marriages between people of different faiths were three times more likely to get divorced than those of the same faith. In fact, in a 1993 study, members of two mainline Protestant religions had a 20% chance of being divorced in 5 years; a 33% for a Catholic and Evangelical, and a 40% chance for a Jew and a Christian. Couples with different ethnicities and races also had distinctive divorce statistics. In 2008, a study by [[Jenifer L. Bratter]] and Rosalind B. King on the [[Education Resources Information Center]], found that unions between White males and non-White females as well as between Hispanics and non-Hispanic individuals, have similar or lower risks of divorce than White marriages. Unions between a White male and Black female last longer than White-White pairings or White-Asian pairings. Conversely, a White female with a Black male and White female with an Asian male are more prone to divorce than White-White pairings. Additionally, as found in 2010, success in marriage has been associated with a higher education and older age. For example, 81% of college graduates who were over 26 years old, who wed in the 1980s, were still married 20 years later. Additionally, 65% of college graduates under 26, who married in the 1980s, were still married 20 years later. Furthermore, 49% of high school graduates under 26 years old, who married in the 1980s, were still married 20 years later. Conversely, 2.9% of adults aged 35β39 and without a college degree got divorced in the year 2009 β compared with 1.6% with a college education. Another study looking at population differences found that a 1% increase in the [[unemployment rate]] correlated with a 1% decrease in the divorce rate. This was found to be presumably true for individuals who were financially challenged when trying to afford the legal proceedings. Nevertheless, another study from 1900 to 2008 found that there was a significant increase in the risk of divorce following a layoff and being unemployed.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-10-21 |title=Layoffs, Divorce, and the Effect of Unemployment Insurance |website=Econofact |url=https://econofact.org/layoffs-divorce-and-the-effect-of-unemployment-insurance |access-date=2022-04-05 |language=en-US |archive-date=7 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220507044005/https://econofact.org/layoffs-divorce-and-the-effect-of-unemployment-insurance |url-status=live }}</ref>
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