The End of Marriage in Scandinavia
The "conservative case" for same-sex marriage collapses.
by Stanley Kurtz - Standard Magazine
02/02/2004, Volume 009, Issue 20
MARRIAGE IS SLOWLY DYING IN SCANDINAVIA. A majority of children in Sweden and Norway are
born out of wedlock. Sixty percent of first-born children in Denmark have unmarried
parents. Not coincidentally, these countries have had something close to full gay marriage
for a decade or more. Same-sex marriage has locked in and reinforced an existing
Scandinavian trend toward the separation of marriage and parenthood. The Nordic family
pattern--including gay marriage--is spreading across Europe. And by looking closely at it
we can answer the key empirical question underlying the gay marriage debate. Will same-sex
marriage undermine the institution of marriage? It already has.
More precisely, it has further undermined the institution. The separation of marriage from
parenthood was increasing; gay marriage has widened the separation. Out-of-wedlock
birthrates were rising; gay marriage has added to the factors pushing those rates higher.
Instead of encouraging a society-wide return to marriage, Scandinavian gay marriage has
driven home the message that marriage itself is outdated, and that virtually any family
form, including out-of-wedlock parenthood, is acceptable.
This is not how the situation has been portrayed by prominent gay marriage advocates
journalist Andrew Sullivan and Yale law professor William Eskridge Jr. Sullivan and
Eskridge have made much of an unpublished study of Danish same-sex registered partnerships
by Darren Spedale, an independent researcher with an undergraduate degree who visited
Denmark in 1996 on a Fulbright scholarship. In 1989, Denmark had legalized de facto gay
marriage (Norway followed in 1993 and Sweden in 1994). Drawing on Spedale, Sullivan and
Eskridge cite
evidence that since then, marriage has strengthened. Spedale reported that in the six
years following the establishment of registered partnerships in Denmark (1990-1996),
heterosexual marriage rates climbed by 10 percent, while heterosexual divorce rates
declined by 12 percent. Writing in the McGeorge Law Review, Eskridge claimed that
Spedale's study had exposed the "hysteria and irresponsibility" of those who
predicted gay marriage would undermine marriage. Andrew Sullivan's Spedale-inspired piece
was subtitled, "The case against same-sex marriage crumbles."
Yet the half-page statistical analysis of heterosexual marriage in Darren Spedale's
unpublished paper doesn't begin to get at the truth about the decline of marriage in
Scandinavia during the nineties. Scandinavian marriage is now so weak that statistics on
marriage and divorce no longer mean what they used to.
Take divorce. It's true that in Denmark, as elsewhere in Scandinavia, divorce numbers
looked better in the nineties. But that's because the pool of married people has been
shrinking for some time. You can't divorce without first getting married. Moreover, a
closer look at Danish divorce in the post-gay marriage decade reveals disturbing trends.
Many Danes have stopped holding off divorce until their kids are grown. And Denmark in the
nineties saw a 25 percent increase in cohabiting couples with children. With fewer parents
marrying, what used to show up in statistical tables as early divorce is now the
unrecorded breakup of a cohabiting couple with children.
What about Spedale's report that the Danish marriage rate increased 10 percent from 1990
to 1996? Again, the news only appears to be good. First, there is no trend. Eurostat's
just-released marriage rates for 2001 show declines in Sweden and Denmark (Norway hasn't
reported). Second, marriage statistics in societies with very low rates (Sweden registered
the lowest marriage rate in recorded history in 1997) must be carefully parsed. In his
study of the Norwegian family in the nineties, for example, Christer Hyggen shows that a
small increase in Norway's marriage rate over the past decade has more to do with the
institution's decline than with any renaissance. Much of the increase in Norway's marriage
rate is driven by older couples "catching up." These couples belong to the first
generation that accepts rearing the first born child out of wedlock. As they bear second
children, some finally get married. (And even this tendency to marry at the birth of a
second child is weakening.) As for the rest of the increase in the Norwegian marriage
rate, it is largely attributable to remarriage among the large number of divorced.
Spedale's report of lower divorce rates and higher marriage rates in post-gay marriage
Denmark is thus misleading. Marriage is now so weak in Scandinavia that shifts in these
rates no longer mean what they would in America. In Scandinavian demography, what counts
is the out-of-wedlock birthrate, and the family dissolution rate.
The family dissolution rate is different from the divorce rate. Because so many
Scandinavians now rear children outside of marriage, divorce rates are unreliable measures
of family weakness. Instead, we need to know the rate at which parents (married or not)
split up. Precise statistics on family dissolution are unfortunately rare. Yet the studies
that have been done show that throughout Scandinavia (and the West) cohabiting couples
with children break up at two to three times the rate of married parents. So rising rates
of cohabitation and out-of-wedlock birth stand as proxy for rising rates of family
dissolution.
By that measure, Scandinavian family dissolution has only been worsening. Between 1990 and
2000, Norway's out-of-wedlock birthrate rose from 39 to 50 percent, while Sweden's rose
from 47 to 55 percent. In Denmark out-of-wedlock births stayed level during the nineties
(beginning at 46 percent and ending at 45 percent). But the leveling off seems to be a
function of a slight increase in fertility among older couples, who marry only after
multiple births (if they don't break up first). That shift masks the 25 percent increase
during the nineties in cohabitation and unmarried parenthood among Danish couples (many of
them young). About 60 percent of
first born children in Denmark now have unmarried parents. The rise of fragile families
based on cohabitation and out-of-wedlock childbearing means that during the nineties, the
total rate of family dissolution in Scandinavia significantly increased.
Scandinavia's out-of-wedlock birthrates may have risen more rapidly in the seventies, when
marriage began its slide. But the push of that rate past the 50 percent mark during the
nineties was in many ways more disturbing. Growth in the out-of-wedlock birthrate is
limited by the tendency of parents to marry after a couple of births, and also by the
persistence of relatively conservative and religious districts. So as out-of-wedlock
childbearing pushes beyond 50 percent, it is reaching the toughest areas of cultural
resistance. The most important trend of the post-gay marriage decade may be the erosion of
the tendency to marry at the birth of a second child. Once even that marker disappears,
the path to the complete disappearance of marriage is open.
And now that married parenthood has become a minority phenomenon, it has lost the critical
mass required to have socially normative force. As Danish sociologists Wehner, Kambskard,
and Abrahamson describe it, in the wake of the changes of the nineties, "Marriage is
no longer a precondition for settling a family--neither legally nor normatively. . . .
What defines and makes the foundation of the Danish family can be said to have moved from
marriage to parenthood."
So the highly touted half-page of analysis from an unpublished paper that supposedly helps
validate the "conservative case" for gay marriage--i.e., that it will encourage
stable marriage for heterosexuals and homosexuals alike--does no such thing. Marriage in
Scandinavia is in deep decline, with children shouldering the burden of rising rates of
family dissolution. And the mainspring of the decline--an increasingly sharp separation
between marriage and parenthood--can be linked to gay marriage. To see this, we need to
understand why marriage is in trouble in Scandinavia to begin with.
SCANDINAVIA has long been a bellwether of family change. Scholars take the Swedish
experience as a prototype for family developments that will, or could, spread throughout
the world. So let's have a look at the decline of Swedish marriage.
In Sweden, as elsewhere, the sixties brought contraception, abortion, and growing
individualism. Sex was separated from procreation, reducing the need for "shotgun
weddings." These changes, along with the movement of women into the workforce,
enabled and encouraged people to marry at later ages. With married couples putting off
parenthood, early divorce had fewer consequences for children. That weakened the taboo
against divorce. Since young couples were putting off children, the next step was to
dispense with marriage and cohabit until children were desired. Americans have lived
through this transformation. The Swedes have simply drawn the final conclusion: If we've
come so far without marriage, why marry at all? Our love is what matters, not a piece of
paper. Why should children change that?
Two things prompted the Swedes to take this extra step--the welfare state and cultural
attitudes. No Western economy has a higher percentage of public employees, public
expenditures--or higher tax rates--than Sweden. The massive Swedish welfare state has
largely displaced the family as provider. By guaranteeing jobs and income to every citizen
(even children), the welfare state renders each individual independent. It's easier to
divorce your spouse when the state will support you instead.
The taxes necessary to support the welfare state have had an enormous impact on the
family. With taxes so high, women must work. This reduces the time available for child
rearing, thus encouraging the expansion of a day-care system that takes a large part in
raising nearly all Swedish children over age one. Here is at least a partial realization
of Simone de Beauvoir's dream of an enforced androgyny that pushes women from the home by
turning children over to the state.
Yet the Swedish welfare state may encourage traditionalism in one respect. The lone teen
pregnancies common in the British and American underclass are rare in Sweden, which has no
underclass to speak of. Even when Swedish couples bear a child out of wedlock, they tend
to reside together when the child is born. Strong state enforcement of child support is
another factor discouraging single motherhood by teens. Whatever the causes, the
discouragement of lone motherhood is a short-term effect. Ultimately, mothers and fathers
can get along financially alone. So children born out of wedlock are raised, initially, by
two cohabiting parents, many of whom later break up.
There are also cultural-ideological causes of Swedish family decline. Even more than in
the United States, radical feminist and socialist ideas pervade the universities and the
media. Many Scandinavian social scientists see marriage as a barrier to full equality
between the sexes, and would not be sorry to see marriage replaced by unmarried
cohabitation. A related cultural-ideological agent of marital decline is secularism.
Sweden is probably the most secular country in the world. Secular social scientists (most
of them quite radical) have largely replaced clerics as arbiters of public morality.
Swedes themselves link the decline of marriage to secularism. And many studies confirm
that, throughout the West, religiosity is associated with institutionally strong marriage,
while heightened secularism is correlated with a weakening of marriage. Scholars have long
suggested that the relatively thin Christianization of the Nordic countries explains a lot
about why the decline of marriage in Scandinavia is a decade ahead of the rest of the
West.
Are Scandinavians concerned about rising out-of-wedlock births, the decline of marriage,
and ever-rising rates of family dissolution? No, and yes. For over 15 years, an American
outsider, Rutgers University sociologist David Popenoe, has played Cassandra on these
issues. Popenoe's 1988 book, "Disturbing the Nest," is still the definitive
treatment of Scandinavian family change and its meaning for the Western world. Popenoe is
no toe-the-line conservative. He has praise for the Swedish welfare state, and criticizes
American opposition to some child welfare programs. Yet Popenoe has documented the slow
motion collapse of the Swedish family, and emphasized the link between Swedish family
decline and welfare policy.
For years, Popenoe's was a lone voice. Yet by the end of the nineties, the problem was too
obvious to ignore. In 2000, Danish sociologist Mai Heide Ottosen published a study,
"Samboskab, Aegteskab og Foraeldrebrud" ("Cohabitation, Marriage and
Parental Breakup"), which confirmed the increased risk of family dissolution to
children of unmarried parents, and gently chided Scandinavian social scientists for
ignoring the "quiet revolution" of out-of-wedlock parenting.
Despite the reluctance of Scandinavian social scientists to study the consequences of
family dissolution for children, we do have an excellent study that followed the life
experiences of all children born in Stockholm in 1953. (Not coincidentally, the research
was conducted by a British scholar, Duncan W.G. Timms.) That study found that regardless
of income or social status, parental breakup had negative effects on children's mental
health. Boys living with single, separated, or divorced mothers had particularly high
rates of impairment in adolescence. An important 2003 study by Gunilla Ringbäck Weitoft,
et al. found that children of single parents in Sweden have more than double the rates of
mortality, severe morbidity, and injury of children in two parent households. This held
true after controlling for a wide range of demographic and socioeconomic circumstances.
THE DECLINE OF MARRIAGE and the rise of unstable cohabitation and out-of-wedlock
childbirth are not confined to Scandinavia. The Scandinavian welfare state aggravates
these problems. Yet none of the forces weakening marriage there are unique to the region.
Contraception, abortion, women in the workforce, spreading secularism, ascendant
individualism, and a substantial welfare state are found in every Western country. That is
why the Nordic pattern is spreading.
Yet the pattern is spreading unevenly. And scholars agree that cultural tradition plays a
central role in determining whether a given country moves toward the Nordic family system.
Religion is a key variable. A 2002 study by the Max Planck Institute, for example,
concluded that countries with the lowest rates of family dissolution and out-of-wedlock
births are "strongly dominated by the Catholic confession." The same study found
that in countries with high levels of family dissolution, religion in general, and
Catholicism in particular, had little influence.
British demographer Kathleen Kiernan, the acknowledged authority on the spread of
cohabitation and out-of-wedlock births across Europe, divides the continent into three
zones. The Nordic countries are the leaders in cohabitation and out-of-wedlock births.
They are followed by a middle group that includes the Netherlands, Belgium, Great Britain,
and Germany. Until recently, France was a member of this middle group, but France's rising
out-of-wedlock birthrate has moved it into the Nordic category. North American rates of
cohabitation and out-of-wedlock birth put the United States and Canada into this middle
group. Most resistant to cohabitation, family dissolution, and out-of-wedlock births are
the southern European countries of Spain, Portugal, Italy, and Greece, and, until
recently, Switzerland and Ireland. (Ireland's rising out-of-wedlock birthrate has just
pushed it into the middle group.)
These three groupings closely track the movement for gay marriage. In the early nineties,
gay marriage came to the Nordic countries, where the out-of-wedlock birthrate was already
high. Ten years later, out-of-wedlock birth rates have risen significantly in the middle
group of nations. Not coincidentally, nearly every country in that middle group has
recently either legalized some form of gay marriage, or is seriously considering doing so.
Only in the group with low out-of-wedlock birthrates has the gay marriage movement
achieved relatively little success.
This suggests that gay marriage is both an effect and a cause of the increasing separation
between marriage and parenthood. As rising out-of-wedlock birthrates disassociate
heterosexual marriage from parenting, gay marriage becomes conceivable. If marriage is
only about a relationship between two people, and is not intrinsically connected to
parenthood, why shouldn't same-sex couples be allowed to marry? It follows that once
marriage is redefined to accommodate same-sex couples, that change cannot help but lock in
and reinforce the very cultural separation between marriage and parenthood that makes gay
marriage conceivable to begin with.
We see this process at work in the radical separation of marriage and parenthood that
swept across Scandinavia in the nineties. If Scandinavian out-of-wedlock birthrates had
not already been high in the late eighties, gay marriage would have been far more
difficult to imagine. More than a decade into post-gay marriage Scandinavia,
out-of-wedlock birthrates have passed 50 percent, and the effective end of marriage as a
protective shield for children has become thinkable. Gay marriage hasn't blocked the
separation of marriage and parenthood; it has advanced it.
WE SEE THIS most clearly in Norway. In 1989, a couple of years after Sweden broke ground
by offering gay couples the first domestic partnership package in Europe, Denmark
legalized de facto gay marriage. This kicked off a debate in Norway (traditionally more
conservative than either Sweden or Denmark), which legalized de facto gay marriage in
1993. (Sweden expanded its benefits packages into de facto gay marriage in 1994.) In
liberal Denmark, where out-of-wedlock birthrates were already very high, the public
favored same-sex marriage. But in Norway, where the out-of-wedlock birthrate was
lower--and religion traditionally stronger--gay marriage was imposed, against the public
will, by the political elite.
Norway's gay marriage debate, which ran most intensely from 1991 through 1993, was a
culture-shifting event. And once enacted, gay marriage had a decidedly unconservative
impact on Norway's cultural contests, weakening marriage's defenders, and placing a weapon
in the hands of those who sought to replace marriage with cohabitation. Since its
adoption, gay marriage has brought division and decline to Norway's Lutheran Church.
Meanwhile, Norway's fast-rising out-of-wedlock birthrate has shot past Denmark's.
Particularly in Norway--once relatively conservative--gay marriage has undermined
marriage's institutional standing for everyone.
Norway's Lutheran state church has been riven by conflict in the decade since the approval
of de facto gay marriage, with the ordination of registered partners the most divisive
issue. The church's agonies have been intensively covered in the Norwegian media, which
have taken every opportunity to paint the church as hidebound and divided. The nineties
began with conservative churchmen control. By the end of the decade, liberals had seized
the reins.
While the most public disputes of the nineties were over homosexuality, Norway's Lutheran
church was also divided over the question of heterosexual cohabitation. Asked directly,
liberal and conservative clerics alike voice a preference for marriage over
cohabitation--especially for couples with children. In practice, however, conservative
churchmen speak out against the trend toward unmarried cohabitation and childbirth, while
liberals acquiesce.
This division over heterosexual cohabitation broke into the open in 2000, at the height of
the church's split over gay partnerships, when Prince Haakon, heir to Norway's throne,
began to live with his lover, a single mother. From the start of the prince's
controversial relationship to its eventual culmination in marriage, the future head of the
Norwegian state church received tokens of public support or understanding from the very
same bishops who were leading the fight to permit the ordination of homosexual partners.
So rather than strengthening Norwegian marriage against the rise of cohabitation and
out-of-wedlock birth, same-sex marriage had the opposite effect. Gay marriage lessened the
church's authority by splitting it into warring factions and providing the secular media
with occasions to mock and expose divisions. Gay marriage also elevated the church's
openly rebellious minority liberal faction to national visibility, allowing Norwegians to
feel that their proclivity for unmarried parenthood, if not fully approved by the church,
was at least not strongly condemned. If the "conservative case" for gay marriage
had been valid, clergy who were supportive of gay marriage would Spedale's have taken a
strong public stand against unmarried heterosexual parenthood. This didn't happen. It was
the conservative clergy who criticized the prince, while the liberal supporters of gay
marriage tolerated his decisions. The message was not lost on ordinary Norwegians, who
continued their flight to unmarried parenthood.
Gay marriage is both an effect and a reinforcing cause of the separation of marriage and
parenthood. In states like Sweden and Denmark, where out-of-wedlock birthrates were
already very high, and the public favored gay marriage, gay unions were an effect of
earlier changes. Once in place, gay marriage symbolically ratified the separation of
marriage and parenthood. And once established, gay marriage became one of several factors
contributing to further increases in cohabitation and out-of-wedlock birthrates, as well
as to early divorce. But in Norway, where out-of-wedlock birthrates were lower, religion
stronger, and the public opposed same-sex unions, gay marriage had an even greater role in
precipitating marital decline.
SWEDEN'S POSITION as the world leader in family decline is associated with a weak clergy,
and the prominence of secular and left-leaning social scientists. In the post-gay marriage
nineties, as Norway's once relatively low out-of-wedlock birthrate was climbing to
unprecedented heights, and as the gay marriage controversy weakened and split the once
respected Lutheran state church, secular social scientists took center stage.
Kari Moxnes, a feminist sociologist specializing in divorce, is one of the most prominent
of Norway's newly emerging group of public social scientists. As a scholar who sees both
marriage and at-home motherhood as inherently oppressive to women, Moxnes is a proponent
of nonmarital cohabitation and parenthood. In 1993, as the Norwegian legislature was
debating gay marriage, Moxnes published an article, "Det tomme ekteskap"
("Empty Marriage"), in the influential liberal paper Dagbladet. She argued that
Norwegian gay marriage was a sign of marriage's growing emptiness, not its strength.
Although Moxnes spoke in favor of gay marriage, she treated its creation as a (welcome)
death knell for marriage itself. Moxnes identified homosexuals--with their experience in
forging relationships unencumbered by children--as social pioneers in the separation of
marriage from parenthood. In recognizing homosexual relationships, Moxnes said, society
was ratifying the division of marriage from parenthood that had spurred the rise of
out-of-wedlock births to begin with.
A frequent public presence, Moxnes enjoyed her big moment in 1999, when she was embroiled
in a dispute with Valgerd Svarstad Haugland, minister of children and family affairs in
Norway's Christian Democrat government. Moxnes had criticized Christian marriage classes
for teaching children the importance of wedding vows. This brought a sharp public rebuke
from Haugland. Responding to Haugland's criticisms, Moxnes invoked homosexual families as
proof that "relationships" were now more important than institutional marriage.
This is not what proponents of the conservative case for gay marriage had in mind. In
Norway, gay marriage has given ammunition to those who wish to put an end to marriage. And
the steady rise of Norway's out-of-wedlock birthrate during the nineties proves that the
opponents of marriage are succeeding. Nor is Kari Moxnes an isolated case.
Months before Moxnes clashed with Haugland, social historian Kari Melby had a very public
quarrel with a leader of the Christian Democratic party over the conduct of Norway's
energy minister, Marit Arnstad. Arnstad had gotten pregnant in office and had declined to
name the father. Melby defended Arnstad, and publicly challenged the claim that children
do best with both a mother and a father. In making her case, Melby praised gay parenting,
along with voluntary single motherhood, as equally worthy alternatives to the traditional
family. So instead of noting that an expectant mother might want to follow the example of
marriage that even gays were now setting, Melby invoked homosexual families as proof that
a child can do as well with one parent as two.
Finally, consider a case that made even more news in Norway, that of handball star Mia
Hundvin (yes, handball prowess makes for celebrity in Norway). Hundvin had been in a
registered gay partnership with fellow handballer Camilla Andersen. These days, however,
having publicly announced her bisexuality, Hundvin is linked with Norwegian snowboarder
Terje Haakonsen. Inspired by her time with Haakonsen's son, Hundvin decided to have a
child. The father of Hundvin's child may well be Haakonsen, but neither Hundvin nor
Haakonsen is saying.
Did Hundvin divorce her registered partner before deciding to become a single mother by
(probably) her new boyfriend? The story in Norway's premiere paper, Aftenposten, doesn't
bother to mention. After noting that Hundvin and Andersen were registered partners, the
paper simply says that the two women are no longer "romantically involved."
Hundvin has only been with Haakonsen about a year. She obviously decided to become a
single mother without bothering to see whether she and Haakonsen might someday marry. Nor
has Hundvin appeared to consider that her affection for Haakonsen's child (also apparently
born out of wedlock) might better be expressed by marrying Haakonsen and becoming his
son's new mother.
Certainly, you can chalk up more than a little of this saga to celebrity culture. But
celebrity culture is both a product and influencer of the larger culture that gives rise
to it. Clearly, the idea of parenthood here has been radically individualized, and utterly
detached from marriage. Registered partnerships have reinforced existing trends. The press
treats gay partnerships more as relationships than as marriages. The symbolic message of
registered partnerships--for social scientists, handball players, and bishops alike--has
been that most any nontraditional family is just fine. Gay marriage has served to validate
the belief that individual choice trumps family form.
The Scandinavian experience rebuts the so-called conservative case for gay marriage in
more than one way. Noteworthy, too, is the lack of a movement toward marriage and monogamy
among gays. Take-up rates on gay marriage are exceedingly small. Yale's William Eskridge
acknowledged this when he reported in 2000 that 2,372 couples had registered after nine
years of the Danish law, 674 after four years of the Norwegian law, and 749 after four
years of the Swedish law.
Danish social theorist Henning Bech and Norwegian sociologist Rune Halvorsen offer
excellent accounts of the gay marriage debates in Denmark and Norway. Despite the regnant
social liberalism in these countries, proposals to recognize gay unions generated
tremendous controversy, and have reshaped the meaning of marriage in the years since. Both
Bech and Halvorsen stress that the conservative case for gay marriage, while put forward
by a few, was rejected by many in the gay community. Bech, perhaps Scandinavia's most
prominent gay thinker, dismisses as an "implausible" claim the idea that gay
marriage promotes monogamy. He treats the "conservative case" as something that
served chiefly tactical purposes during a difficult political debate. According to
Halvorsen, many of Norway's gays imposed self-censorship during the marriage debate, so as
to hide their opposition to marriage itself. The goal of the gay marriage movements in
both Norway and Denmark, say Halvorsen and Bech, was not marriage but social approval for
homosexuality. Halvorsen suggests that the low numbers of registered gay couples may be
understood as a collective protest against the expectations (presumably, monogamy)
embodied in marriage.
SINCE LIBERALIZING DIVORCE in the first decades of the twentieth century, the Nordic
countries have been the leading edge of marital change. Drawing on the Swedish experience,
Kathleen Kiernan, the British demographer, uses a four-stage model by which to gauge a
country's movement toward Swedish levels of out-of-wedlock births.
In stage one, cohabitation is seen as a deviant or avant-garde practice, and the vast
majority of the population produces children within marriage. Italy is at this first
stage. In the second stage, cohabitation serves as a testing period before marriage, and
is generally a childless phase. Bracketing the problem of underclass single parenthood,
America is largely at this second stage. In stage three, cohabitation becomes increasingly
acceptable, and parenting is no longer automatically associated with marriage. Norway was
at this third stage, but with recent demographic and legal changes has entered stage four.
In the fourth stage (Sweden and Denmark), marriage and cohabitation become practically
indistinguishable, with many, perhaps even most, children born and raised outside of
marriage. According to Kiernan, these stages may vary in duration, yet once a country has
reached a stage, return to an earlier phase is unlikely. (She offers no examples of stage
reversal.) Yet once a stage has been reached, earlier phases coexist.
The forces pushing nations toward the Nordic model are almost universal. True, by
preserving legal distinctions between marriage and cohabitation, reining in the welfare
state, and preserving at least some traditional values, a given country might forestall or
prevent the normalization of nonmarital parenthood. Yet every Western country is
susceptible to the pull of the Nordic model. Nor does Catholicism guarantee immunity.
Ireland, perhaps because of its geographic, linguistic, and cultural proximity to England,
is now suffering from out-of-wedlock birthrates far in excess of the rest of Catholic
Europe. Without deeming a shift inevitable, Kiernan openly wonders how long America can
resist the pull of stages three and four.
Although Sweden leads the world in family decline, the United States is runner-up. Swedes
marry less, and bear more children out of wedlock, than any other industrialized nation.
But Americans lead the world in single parenthood and divorce. If we bracket the crisis of
single parenthood among African-Americans, the picture is somewhat different. Yet even
among non-Hispanic whites, the American divorce rate is extremely high by world standards.
The American mix of family traditionalism and family instability is unusual. In comparison
to Europe, Americans are more religious and more likely to turn to the family than the
state for a wide array of needs--from child care, to financial support, to care for the
elderly. Yet America's individualism cuts two ways. Our cultural libertarianism protects
the family as a bulwark against the state, yet it also breaks individuals loose from the
family. The danger we face is a combination of America's divorce rate with unstable,
Scandinavian-style out-of-wedlock parenthood. With a growing tendency for cohabiting
couples to have children outside of marriage, America is headed in that direction.
Young Americans are more likely to favor gay marriage than their elders. That oft-noted
fact is directly related to another. Less than half of America's twentysomethings consider
it wrong to bear children outside marriage. There is a growing tendency for even middle
class cohabiting couples to have children without marrying.
Nonetheless, although cohabiting parenthood is growing in America, levels here are still
far short of those in Europe. America's situation is not unlike Norway's in the early
nineties, with religiosity relatively strong, the out-of-wedlock birthrate still
relatively low (yet rising), and the public opposed to gay marriage. If, as in Norway, gay
marriage were imposed here by a socially liberal cultural elite, it would likely speed us
on the way toward the classic Nordic pattern of less frequent marriage, more frequent
out-of-wedlock birth, and skyrocketing family dissolution.
In the American context, this would be a disaster. Beyond raising rates of middle class
family dissolution, a further separation of marriage from parenthood would reverse the
healthy turn away from single-parenting that we have begun to see since welfare reform.
And cross-class family decline would bring intense pressure for a new expansion of the
American welfare state.
All this is happening in Britain. With the Nordic pattern's spread across Europe,
Britain's out-of-wedlock birthrate has risen to 40 percent. Most of that increase is among
cohabiting couples. Yet a significant number of out-of-wedlock births in Britain are to
lone teenage mothers. This a function of Britain's class divisions. Remember that although
the Scandinavian welfare state encourages family dissolution in the long term, in the
short term, Scandinavian parents giving birth out of wedlock tend to stay together. But
given the presence of a substantial underclass in Britain, the spread of Nordic
cohabitation there has sent lone teen parenting rates way up. As Britain's rates of single
parenting and family dissolution have grown, so has pressure to expand the welfare state
to compensate for economic help that families can no longer provide. But of course, an
expansion of the welfare state would only lock the weakening of Britain's family system
into place.
If America is to avoid being forced into a similar choice, we'll have to resist the
separation of marriage from parenthood. Yet even now we are being pushed in the
Scandinavian direction. Stimulated by rising rates of unmarried parenthood, the
influential American Law Institute (ALI) has proposed a series of legal reforms
("Principles of Family Dissolution") designed to equalize marriage and
cohabitation. Adoption of the ALI principles would be a giant step toward the Scandinavian
system.
AMERICANS take it for granted that, despite its recent troubles, marriage will always
exist. This is a mistake. Marriage is disappearing in Scandinavia, and the forces
undermining it there are active throughout the West. Perhaps the most disturbing sign for
the future is the collapse of the Scandinavian tendency to marry after the second child.
At the start of the nineties, 60 percent of unmarried Norwegian parents who lived together
had only one child. By 2001, 56 percent of unmarried, cohabiting parents in Norway had two
or more children. This suggests that someday, Scandinavian parents might simply stop
getting married altogether, no matter how many children they have.
The death of marriage is not inevitable. In a given country, public policy decisions and
cultural values could slow, and perhaps halt, the process of marital decline. Nor are we
faced with an all-or-nothing choice between the marital system of, say, the 1950s and
marriage's disappearance. Kiernan's model posits stopping points. So repealing no-fault
divorce, or even eliminating premarital cohabitation, are not what's at issue. With
no-fault divorce, Americans traded away some of the marital stability that protects
children to gain more freedom for adults. Yet we can accept that trade-off, while still
drawing a line against descent into a Nordic-style system. And cohabitation as a
premarital testing phase is not the same as unmarried parenting. Potentially, a line
between the two can hold.
Developments in the last half-century have surely weakened the links between American
marriage and parenthood. Yet to a remarkable degree, Americans still take it for granted
that parents should marry. Scandinavia shocks us. Still, who can deny that gay marriage
will accustom us to a more Scandinavian-style separation of marriage and parenthood? And
with our underclass, the social pathologies this produces in America are bound to be more
severe than they already are in wealthy and socially homogeneous Scandinavia.
All of these considerations suggest that the gay marriage debate in America is too
important to duck. Kiernan maintains that as societies progressively detach marriage from
parenthood, stage reversal is impossible. That makes sense. The association between
marriage and parenthood is partly a mystique. Disenchanted mystiques cannot be restored on
demand.
What about a patchwork in which some American states have gay marriage while others do
not? A state-by-state patchwork would practically guarantee a shift toward the Nordic
family system. Movies and television, which do not respect state borders, would embrace
gay marriage. The cultural effects would be national.
What about Vermont-style civil unions? Would that be a workable compromise? Clearly not.
Scandinavian registered partnerships are Vermont-style civil unions. They are not called
marriage, yet resemble marriage in almost every other respect. The key differences are
that registered partnerships do not permit adoption or artificial insemination, and cannot
be celebrated in state-affiliated churches. These limitations are gradually being
repealed. The lesson of the Scandinavian experience is that even de facto same-sex
marriage undermines marriage.
The Scandinavian example also proves that gay marriage is not interracial marriage in a
new guise. The miscegenation analogy was never convincing. There are plenty of reasons to
think that, in contrast to race, sexual orientation will have profound effects on
marriage. But with Scandinavia, we are well beyond the realm of even educated speculation.
The post-gay marriage changes in the Scandinavian family are significant. This is not like
the fantasy about interracial birth defects. There is a serious scholarly debate about the
spread of the Nordic family pattern. Since gay marriage is a part of that pattern, it
needs to be part of that debate.
Conservative advocates of gay marriage want to test it in a few states. The implication is
that, should the experiment go bad, we can call it off. Yet the effects, even in a few
American states, will be neither containable nor revocable. It took about 15 years after
the change hit Sweden and Denmark for Norway's out-of-wedlock birthrate to begin to move
from "European" to "Nordic" levels. It took another 15 years (and the
advent of gay marriage) for Norway's out-of-wedlock birthrate to shoot past even
Denmark's. By the time we see the effects of gay marriage in America, it will be too late
to do anything about it. Yet we needn't wait that long. In effect, Scandinavia has run our
experiment for us. The results are in.
***Stanley Kurtz is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution. His "Beyond Gay
Marriage" appeared in our August 4, 2003, issue.