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Presentation on Cohabitation and Case Studies
Presentation Co-Habition 15’ I. Intro (Hưng): 1. Introduce the group 2. What is Cohabittion?
Cohabitation is an arrangement where two people who are not married live together in an intimate relationship, particularly an emotionally and/or sexually intimate one, on a long-term or permanent basis. II. Body (Nhàn, Hạc, Cúc, Trí): 1. Advantages (Nhàn, Trí) i. Protesting the Institution of Marriage * Despite religious, cultural and legal biases against non-traditional unions, more and more Americans are accepting of unions between two men or two women. In fact, according to an April 2011 CNN/Opinion Research Corporation Poll, 51 percent of Americans think gays and lesbians should have the same legal rights as married men and women. Some heterosexual couples choose to protest the heterosexist bias of the institution of marriage by refusing to wed until all couples are permitted to wed. Others reject the institution of marriage altogether, believing that it privileges patriarchal values. For people with ethical objects to marriage or to legislation authorizing only one type of marriage, cohabitation is an alternative.

Read more: The Advantages of Cohabitation in Couples | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/info_8448460_advantages-cohabitation-couples.html#ixzz2FkIpMwTC

ii. Financial Benefits * Cohabitation is financially advantageous if the two people who are cohabitating would otherwise reside alone. Not only can cohabitating couples split rent, they can also split cable, Internet, telephone and other utility bills. People can also save money on gas since they will not be traveling back and forth between each other 's residences. Cohabitation allows couples to save money on the monthly costs of living, and this may be helpful if the couple is saving for a wedding, honeymoon or a future mortgage. According to the Pew Research Poll, two thirds of persons that have cohabitated regarded the arrangement as a step towards marriage. If the

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