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Showing 1 to 15 of 60 results Save | Export
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Wong, Jen D.; Almeida, David M. – Gerontologist, 2013
Purpose of the study: This study examines how employment status (worker vs. retiree) and life course influences (age, gender, and marital status) are associated with time spent on daily household chores. Second, this study assesses whether the associations between daily stressors and time spent on daily household chores differ as a function of…
Descriptors: Employment Level, Employed Women, Organizations (Groups), Housework
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Treas, Judith; Tai, Tsui-o – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
Despite many studies on the gendered division of housework, there is little research on how couples divide the work of household management. Relative resource theories of household bargaining inform analyses of who does the housework, but their applicability to household management is unclear, if only because management responsibility may be…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Housework, Spouses, Sex Role
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Walters, Peter; Whitehouse, Gillian – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
Unpaid household labor is still predominantly performed by women, despite dramatic increases in female labor force participation over the past 50 years. For this article, interviews with 76 highly skilled women who had returned to the workforce following the birth of children were analyzed to capture reflexive understandings of the balance of paid…
Descriptors: Labor Force Nonparticipants, Employed Women, Labor, Housework
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Killewald, Alexandra – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2011
It has been proposed that the negative association between wives' earnings and their time in housework is due to greater outsourcing of household labor by households with high-earning wives, but this hypothesis has not been tested directly. In a sample of dual-earner married couples in the Consumption and Activities Mail Survey of the Health and…
Descriptors: Spouses, Labor, Mail Surveys, Housework
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Gager, Constance T.; Yabiku, Scott T. – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
Motivated by the trend of women spending more time in paid labor and the general speedup of everyday life, the authors explore whether the resulting time crunch affects sexual frequency among married couples. Although prior research has examined the associations between relationship quality and household labor time, few have examined a dimension…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Family Work Relationship, Housework, Home Management
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Sayer, Liana C.; Fine, Leigh – Social Indicators Research, 2011
Married women continue to spend more time doing housework than men and economic resources influence women's housework more strongly than men's. To explain this, gender theorists point to how gender figures into identities, family interactions, and societal norms and opportunity structures. The extent of this configuration varies culturally and, in…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Race, Marital Status, Employed Women
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Lincoln, Anne E. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2008
Explanations for married men's wage premium often emphasize greater market productivity due to a gendered division of household labor, though this "specialization thesis" has been insufficiently interrogated. Using data from Wave 2 of the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 972), this paper examines the relationship between wages and…
Descriptors: Wages, Housework, Marriage, Males
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Treas, Judith; de Ruijter, Esther – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2008
Despite the rise in women's paid employment, little is known about how women and their partners allocate money to outsource domestic tasks, especially in unmarried unions. Tobit analyses of 6,170 married and cohabiting couples in the 1998 Consumer Expenditure Survey test hypotheses that recognize gender inequality between partners, gender typing…
Descriptors: Income, Expenditures, Employed Women, Housework
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Okafor, Emeka Emmanuel – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2009
The use of adolescents as domestic servants has become prevalent in most urban centers in Nigeria. This study focused on adolescents who work as domestic househelps in urban centers with special reference to Ibadan, Nigeria. The main objective of the study is to examine their mode of recruitment, the nature of their work as well the impact of such…
Descriptors: Social History, Employment, Adolescents, Foreign Countries
Lee, Yu-Jin – ProQuest LLC, 2010
What is the meaning of Korean women's career-leaving experience? To answer this question, this study adopted a hermeneutic phenomenology approach. My intention was to search for the deeper meaning of Korean women's career-leaving experience from their perspective. Ten Korean women who had left their careers due to their domestic roles in their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Employed Women, Stopouts
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Ezzedeen, Souha R.; Ritchey, Kristen Grossnickle – Journal of Family Issues, 2008
Little is known about the spousal support received by married executive women and the support behaviors that they value. This article details the results of a qualitative study of 20 senior and executive-level women, with the aim of understanding their received and valued spousal support. An inductive typology was developed through semistructured…
Descriptors: Mentors, Females, Employed Women, Spouses
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Hafstrom, Jeanne L.; Schram, Vicki R. – Home Economics Research Journal, 1983
Provides an expansion and improvement of research on the factors related to wife's time spent doing housework. Results indicate that the fewer hours worked outside the home, the larger the family, the fewer number of meals out, the larger the house, the more hours are spent on housework. (JOW)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Females, Homemakers, Housework
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Stafford, Kathryn – Home Economics Research Journal, 1983
Discusses research based on a household time allocation model which assumes employment status and length of employment day are outside the realm of family choice when making daily time-use decisions. (JOW)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Level, Homemakers, Housework
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Blair, Sampson Lee; Johnson, Michael P. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1992
Analyzed determinants of wives' perceptions of fairness of division of household labor. Data from 1988 National Survey of Families and Households indicated that husbands' contributions to "female" tasks and appreciation of women's household labor were most important determinants of wives' perceptions of fairness, with strength of…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Employed Women, Employment, Homemakers
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Brayfield, April A. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1992
Examined effects of employment resources (income and workplace authority) on percentage of feminine-typed housekeeping tasks done by Canadian women and men. Found that personal achievements in labor market mediated effects of relative employment resources on performing such tasks, albeit differently for Canadian women and men. French-Canadian…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment, Family Income, Foreign Countries
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