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The Living In Sin Belt  permlink

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Find more posts in: Humanities & Social Science
Posted on: September 20, 2009 5:08 AM, by Razib Khan

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Poking around the CensusScope site I found some interesting maps to compare & contrast. Here are the frequency of "nuclear families":

map_married_w_kids.png

No big surprises here. Utah & the Heartland have a high proportion of households composed of nuclear families. The Black Belt, not as much.

How about families composed of people "living in sin"? That is, unmarried couples.

map_unmarried.png

Looks like "Greater New England" likes the sin. Though that isn't a function of climate, as Florida mirrors New England with high rates of cohabitation and low rates of nuclear families.

Now how about families where grandparents are responsible for grandchildren?

map_30plus_responsiblegrand.png

This patterns seems prevalent among ethnic minorities.

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Comments

1

The exciting thing about widespread genetic sequencing will be the ability to look for correlations between behavior and allelic variation.

Posted by: Paul Jones | September 20, 2009 8:30 AM

2

The cohabitation trend seems to be there not just for New England, but regions settled by Yankee settlers.

It would be interested to break these down into self-reported Census ancestry categories; see if they are broadly similar within groups over regions.

Posted by: Thorfinn | September 20, 2009 7:28 PM

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