Furstenberg, Frank F2023-05-232023-05-2319922017-06-13Furstenberg, F. (1992). Illegitimacy. In Borgatta, E.F. & Borgatta, M.L. (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Sociology (pp. 876-881). New York: MacMillan.https://repository.upenn.edu/handle/20.500.14332/47070Until the 1960s, it was widely assumed that marriage was a universal or nearly universal institution for licensing parenthood. Marriage assigned paternity rights to the fathers (and their families) and guaranteed social recognition and economic support to mothers and their offspring. According to Malinowski (1930), who first articulated "the principle of legitimacy," and to Davis (1939, 1949), who extended Malinowski's theory into sociology, marriage provides the added benefit to children of connecting them to a wider network of adults who have a stake in their long-term development.Family, Life Course, and SocietySociologyIllegitimacyBook Chapter