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Practices and perceptions of living apart together

Duncan, Simon
Phillips, M.
Carter, J.
Roseneil, S.
Stoilova, M.
Publication Date
2014
End of Embargo
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Rights
© 2014 Taylor and Francis. This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in Family Science, 2014. Copyright Taylor & Francis. Available online at https://doi.org/10.1080/19424620.2014.927382.
Peer-Reviewed
Yes
Open Access status
openAccess
Accepted for publication
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Abstract
This paper examines how people living apart together (LATs) maintain their relationships, and describes how they view this living arrangement. It draws on a 2011 survey on living apart together (LAT) in Britain, supplemented by qualitative interviewing. Most LATs in Britain live near to their partners, and have frequent contact with them. At the same time most see LAT in terms of a monogamous, committed couple, where marriage remains a strong normative reference point, and see living apart as not much different from co-residence in terms of risk, emotional security, or closeness. Many see themselves living together in the future. However, LAT does appear to make difference to patterns of care between partners. In addition, LATs report advantages in terms of autonomy and flexibility. The paper concludes that LAT allows individuals some freedom to manoeuvre in balancing the demands of life circumstances and personal needs with those of an intimate relationship, but that practices of living apart together do not, in general, represent a radical departure from the norms of contemporary coupledom, except for that which expects couples to cohabit.
Version
Accepted manuscript
Citation
Duncan S, Phillips M, Carter J et al (2014) Practices and perceptions of living apart together. Family Science. 5(1): 1-10.
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Article
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