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Original Articles

Studying the longest ‘legal’ U.S. same-sex couples: A case of lessons learned

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Abstract

We review methodological opportunities and lessons learned in conducting a longitudinal, prospective study of same-sex couples with civil unions, recruited from a population-based sample, who were compared with same-sex couples in their friendship circle who did not have civil unions, and heterosexual married siblings and their spouse. At Time 1 (2002), Vermont was the only US state to provide legal recognition similar to marriage to same-sex couples; couples came from other US states and other countries to obtain a civil union. At Time 2 (2005), only one US state had legalized same-sex marriage, and at Time 3 (2013) about half of US states had legalized same-sex marriage, some within weeks of the onset of the Time 3 study. Opportunities included sampling legalized same-sex relationships from a population; the use of heterosexual married couples and same-sex couples not in legalized relationships as comparison samples from within the same social network; comparisons between sexual minority and heterosexual women and men with and without children; improvements in statistical methods for non-independence of data and missing data; and the use of mixed methodologies. Lessons learned included obtaining funding, locating participants over time as technologies changed, and on-going shifts in marriage laws during the study.

Notes

1 The Vermont civil union certificates ask about “sex” and on the CUPPLES survey we ask participants “are you” __male __female” and later “are you transgender.” Thus we refer to “same-sex couples” rather than “same-gender couples.”

2 At Time 1 none of the CUPPLES project participants identified as transgender so we use only the acronym LGB when specifically referring to our sample. By Time 3 one participant identified as butch/non-binary.

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