Remarriage and Stepfamilies: Strategic Sites for Family Scholarship in the 21st CenturyThis article reviews areas of advancement over the past decade in our understanding of remarriage and stepfamilies and suggests promising new directions for future work. Profound shifts in the demographic context of family life motivate central themes in recent scholarship on remarriage and stepfamilies, including the diversity and complexity of stepfamily structures and processes, the consequences of multiple partnerships for adults and children, and potential selectivity in the characteristics of individuals entering remarried families and stepfamilies. Despite challenges to further progress, I argue that remarriage and stepfamilies offer strategic opportunities to investigate many core concerns of family scholars.Changing patterns of partnership and parenthood have fundamentally reshaped families in the United States and many other industrialized countries in recent decades, leading a number of scholars to argue that the role of personal choice in family life has expanded over time (e.g., Modell, 1989;Rindfuss, 1991). Contemporary marriages are less likely to end with the death