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Hill, Elizabeth A.; Dorfman, Lorraine T. – Family Relations, 1982
Conducted (N=36) interviews with homemakers whose husbands recently retired from a number of occupations. Investigated positive and negative aspects of retirement and a range of variables associated with life satisfaction and three domains of satisfaction. Found the most consistent correlate of wife's satisfaction was husband's participation in…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Family Life, Homemakers, Interpersonal Relationship

Szinovacz, Maximiliane – Family Relations, 1992
Investigated whether perceived involvement in household work after retirement related to husbands' and wives' retirement adaptation. Data from 611 recent retirees showed positive effect of postretirement housework involvement on women's adjustment. For men, relationship between housework and adaptation was contingent on such factors as health,…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Homemakers, Housework, Physical Health

Meiners, Jane E.; Olson, Geraldine I. – Family Relations, 1987
Examined time allotments to household, paid, and unpaid work for farm, rural nonfarm, and urban women. Findings from 2,100 two-parent, two-child families revealed no significant differences among groups in allocation of time to household work. Of three groups, farm women spent more time in unpaid work, and rural nonfarm women devoted most time to…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Employed Women, Farmers, Females

Darling-Fisher, Cynthia S.; Tiedje, Linda Beth – Family Relations, 1990
Examined relationship between maternal employment characteristics and father participation in child care by comparing trends in sample of 214 homemakers and employed women and sample of 139 professional women. Results indicated that, although husbands were more involved in child care when wives were employed, women were primary caregivers…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Employed Parents, Employment Level, Fathers

Shaw, Susan M. – Family Relations, 1988
Time-budget and interview study with 60 married couples analyzed household labor activities in terms of whether they were experienced as work or leisure, and in terms of their perceptual dimensions and objective situational contexts. Found women defined their household labor activities more often as work than did males, and that situational…
Descriptors: Definitions, Foreign Countries, Home Management, Homemakers

Dorfman, Lorraine T.; Hill, Elizabeth A. – Family Relations, 1986
Investigated reactions of rural housewives (N=95) to their husbands' retirement and factors associated with satisfaction of rural wives during the retirement years. Found a highly consistent relationship between joint decision-making by husband and wife and satisfaction of the wife in retirement. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Decision Making, Females, Homemakers

Beach, Betty A. – Family Relations, 1987
Examined 15 rural home-working families for allocation of work time. Found families displayed marked variability in work hour and work day patterns, both individual and across group. Both work days and allocated work times were punctuated by interruptions for child care and household chores, resulting in work/family time interaction rather than…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Family Life, Home Management, Homemakers

Demo, David H.; Acock, Alan C. – Family Relations, 1993
Used data from nationally representative sample (n=2,528) to examine division of household labor in first-marriage families, stepfamilies, families headed by divorced mothers, and families headed by never-married mothers. Findings indicated that, across family types and regardless of women's employment status, women performed two to three times…
Descriptors: Cohabitation, Divorce, Employment Level, Family Structure

Keith, Pat M.; Schafer, Robert B. – Family Relations, 1985
Examined how assessments of role behavior in the family and relative deprivation in work-family situations were linked with depression among homemakers (N=130) and employed married women (N=135). Results showed that negative evaluations of role behavior in the family were more depressing to homemakers than to employed women. (NRB)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Depression (Psychology), Employed Women, Females