This statistic shows the results of a survey conducted in the United States in 2017 on the duration of the current relationship status of Americans. The results were then sorted by age. Some 39 percent of respondents between 30 and 49 years stated they have been single/in a relationship for more than 10 years.
This statistic shows the results of a 2014 Popsugar survey among American women asking them what tends to make you happy in your romantic relationships. During the survey, 78.5 percent of female respondents said trust.
In July 2011, the Immigrant panel completed a questionnaire on the happiness with their relationship. The survey aims to gain insight into the level of satisfaction of immigrants in the Netherlands with their relationship and their attitudes towards relationships in general.
This statistic shows the results of a survey conducted in the United States in 2019 on the importance of romance in a relationship. Some 40 percent of respondents stated that romance was essential to them in a relationship because they could not feel love without it.
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A fundamental question of any new relationship is, will it last? Transient relationships, recently defined by the authors, are an ideal type of social tie to explore this question: these relationships are characterized by distinguishable starting and ending temporal points, linking the question of tie longevity to relationship finite lifetime. In this study, we use mobile phone data sets from the UK and Italy to analyze the weekly allocation of time invested in maintaining transient relationships. We find that more relationships are created during weekdays, with a greater proportion of them receiving more contact during these days of the week in the long term. The smaller group of relationships that receive more phone calls during the weekend tend to remain active for more time. We uncover a sorting process by which some ties are moved from weekdays to weekends and vice versa, mostly in the first half of the relationship. This process also carries more information about the ultimate lifetime of a tie than the part of the week when the relationship started, which suggests an early evaluation period that leads to a decision on how to allocate time to different types of transient ties.
These data are part of NACJD's Fast Track Release and are distributed as they were received from the data depositor. The files have been zipped by NACJD for release, but not checked or processed except for the removal of direct identifiers. Users should refer to the accompanying readme file for a brief description of the files available with this collection and consult the investigator(s) if further information is needed. Teenage adolescent females residing in Baltimore, Maryland who were involved in a relationship with a history of violence were sought after to participate in this research study. Respondents were interviewed and then followed through daily diary entries for several months. The aim of the research was to understand the context regarding teen dating violence (TDV). Prior research on relationship context has not focused on minority populations; therefore, the focus of this project was urban, predominantly African American females. The available data in this collection includes three SAS (.sas7bdat) files and a single SAS formats file that contains variable and value label information for all three data files. The three data files are: final_baseline.sas7bdat (157 cases / 252 variables) final_partnergrid.sas7bdat (156 cases / 76 variables) hart_final_sas7bdata (7004 cases / 23 variables)
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Percentage of persons aged 15 years and over by satisfaction with friend relationships, by gender, for Canada, regions and provinces.
In a March 2019 survey, 53 percent of respondents globally said that when establishing external relationships they check for KYC on the identity of clients, while only 27 percent look for an ultimate beneficial ownership status. The KYC (Know Your Client) form ensures investment advisors know details about their clients´ risk tolerance, investment knowledge, and financial position.
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Occupational accident statistics, relationship between types of accidents and injured body parts by manufacturing sector (annual) data
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Sub-table of Table 92. It includes the subset ‘marriage/partnership/family, including total family members’ broken down by partnership
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Economically Active Population Survey: Persons aged 16 to 64 years old(*), according to whether or not they have reduced the number of hours worked in order to provide care, and if they have, by the time during which they reduced the number of hours worked. Classification by sex and relationship with economic activity. National.
An updated Permit Data Model that includes relationships between the component feature classes. The Dissolved Use Impacts (SDOT.V_SU_PERMIT_USE_IMPACT_DISS) feature class is derived from dissolving the Use Impacts (SDOT.V_SU_PERMIT_USE_IMPACTS) feature class by Permit Number. The Impacts feature class is the Use Impact street line segments that are associated with any give Permit point (V_SU_PERMITS). The relationships connect the Permit points to the Dissolved Use Impacts and then the Dissolved Use Impacts to the component Use Impacts. This data model allows you to see all impacted street line segments associated with any given Permit easily, while also being able to drill down to any specific Use Impact for a given Permit. Service is constructed for use in the Right of Way Map. Data set to Nightly Refresh. Any Questions or Concerns contact the SDOT Street Use Data and GIS Team: Craig Moore/Bryan Bommersbach
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Available data suggest that individual and family well-being are linked to the quality of women's and men's couple relationships, but few tools exist to assess couple relationship functioning in low and middle-income countries. In response to this gap, Catholic Relief Services has developed a Couple Functionality Assessment Tool (CFAT) to capture valid and reliable data on various domains of relationship quality. This tool is designed to be used by interventions which aim to improve couple and family well-being as a means of measuring the effectiveness of these interventions, particularly related to couple relationship quality. We carried out a validation study of the CFAT among 401 married and cohabiting adults (203 women and 198 men) in rural Chikhwawa District, Malawi. Using psychometric scales, the CFAT addressed six domains of couple relationship quality (intimacy, partner support, sexual satisfaction, gender roles, decision-making, and communication and conflict management), and included questions on intimate partner violence. We used exploratory factor analysis to assess scale performance of each domain and produce a shortened Relationship Quality Index (RQI) composed of items from five relationship quality domains. This article reports the performance of the RQI. Internal reliability and validity of the RQI were found to be good. Regression analyses examined the relationship of the RQI to outcomes important to health and development: intra-household cooperation, positive health behaviors, intimate partner violence, and gender-equitable norms. We found many significant correlations between RQI scores and these couple- and family-level development issues. There is a need to further validate the tool with use in other populations as well as to continue to explore whether the observed linkages between couple functionality and development outcomes are causal relationships.
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LGA based data for Relationship in Household by Age by Sex, in Place of Enumeration Profile (PEP), 2016 Census. Count of persons in occupied private dwellings categorised by the relationship of each person in a family to the family reference person or, where a person is not part of a family, that person's relationship to the household reference person. Excludes persons in 'Other non-classifiable' households. Includes same sex couples. P23 is broken up into 2 sections (P23a - P23b), this section contains 'Males Husband in a registered marriage Age 15-24 years' - 'Females Other related individual Total'. The data is by LGA 2016 boundaries. Periodicity: 5-Yearly. Note: There are small random adjustments made to all cell values to protect the confidentiality of data. These adjustments may cause the sum of rows or columns to differ by small amounts from table totals. For more information visit the data source: http://www.abs.gov.au/census.
Official statistics are produced impartially and free from political influence.
SA3 based data for Relationship in Household by Age by Sex, in Place of Enumeration Profile (PEP), 2016 Census. Count of persons in occupied private dwellings categorised by the relationship of each …Show full descriptionSA3 based data for Relationship in Household by Age by Sex, in Place of Enumeration Profile (PEP), 2016 Census. Count of persons in occupied private dwellings categorised by the relationship of each person in a family to the family reference person or, where a person is not part of a family, that person's relationship to the household reference person. Excludes persons in 'Other non-classifiable' households. Includes same sex couples. P23 is broken up into 2 sections (P23a - P23b), this section contains 'Males Husband in a registered marriage Age 15-24 years' - 'Females Other related individual Total'. The data is by SA3 2016 boundaries. Periodicity: 5-Yearly. Note: There are small random adjustments made to all cell values to protect the confidentiality of data. These adjustments may cause the sum of rows or columns to differ by small amounts from table totals. For more information visit the data source: http://www.abs.gov.au/census. Copyright attribution: Government of the Commonwealth of Australia - Australian Bureau of Statistics, (2017): ; accessed from AURIN on 12/3/2020. Licence type: Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Australia (CC BY 2.5 AU)
This data set includes a row for each type of non-appointment relationship between an insurance agent, agency, adjuster, and businesses and an insurance company or another person or business approved to manage insurance-related products or claims. To view a list of formal designations, or appointments, for agents to represent a regulated company, go to Active insurance company appointments for agents and adjusters. To view a list of formal designations, or appointments, for agencies to represent a regulated company, go to Active insurance company appointments for agencies and businesses.
This statistic displays the share of people feeling satisfied with their social relationships in Finland in 2018, by education level. According to the results of the survey, approximately 80 percent of the respondents felt satisfied with their social relationships. With roughly 82 percent, the share of people with a higher degree feeling satisfied with their relationships was two percent higher than the average.
This statistic shows the distribution of women in a relationship in France in 2018, according to the place they met their current partner. The majority of French women stated that they have met their partner where they worked, while 12 percent of French women had met their partner via a dating agency.
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This is the source data used in Nature Energy manuscript to produce visualisations, authored by Yuwan Malakar and Rosie Day. This manuscript is designed to compare women's perspectives of the relationships between their wellbeing and cooking fuels. they use. The study was conducted in rural India. Qualitative data generated from focus group discussions is used for the analysis. The data was collected from November 2016 to February 2017. Lineage: This data was produced via R codes. The source data are in the *.csv format.
This statistic shows the results of a survey conducted in the United States in 2017 on the duration of the current relationship status of Americans. The results were then sorted by age. Some 39 percent of respondents between 30 and 49 years stated they have been single/in a relationship for more than 10 years.