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Journal of Marriage and the… | 4 |
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Burr, Wesley R. | 1 |
Hawkes, Glenn R. | 1 |
Keim, Ann Mackey | 1 |
Kolb, Trudy M. | 1 |
Salamon, Sonya | 1 |
Straus, Murray A. | 1 |
Taylor, Minna | 1 |
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Journal Articles | 1 |
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Salamon, Sonya; Keim, Ann Mackey – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1979
Control over land, a scarce resource for farmers, is found to be the source of women's power in a community of Illinois farm families. Women appear to make a trade-off of lower status and less power for male management of the family enterprise, which assures them a financially secure widowhood. (Author)
Descriptors: Family Relationship, Farm Management, Farmers, Females

Burr, Wesley R.; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1977
This study obtained data about marital relationships of parents of 1056 college students, and used the data to test ideas in Rodman's theory that resources and authority beliefs influence marital power. The clearest finding was that normative structure was more important than resources in accounting for variances in power. (Author)
Descriptors: College Students, Cultural Influences, Family Life, Norms

Kolb, Trudy M.; Straus, Murray A. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1974
Data on intrafamily power relations, obtained by observing the interaction of husband-wife-child groups during a laboratory problem-solving session, are related to ratings of marital happiness. Families above the median in husband-to-wife power tend to be high in marital happiness. (Author)
Descriptors: Family (Sociological Unit), Happiness, Informal Organization, Interaction Process Analysis

Hawkes, Glenn R.; Taylor, Minna – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1975
Familial power structure in Mexican and Mexican-American farm labor families was explored by standardized interview to determine if the commonly held view of husband dominance could be substantiated. Egalitarianism was by far the most common mode in both decision-making and action-taking. Dominance-submission patterns are much less universal than…
Descriptors: Agricultural Laborers, Cross Cultural Studies, Decision Making, Family (Sociological Unit)