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Showing 1 to 15 of 18 results Save | Export
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Elizabeth Sumida Huaman – International Journal of Human Rights Education, 2019
This article discusses Quechua women, labor, and educational opportunity in Peru and explores the relationship between coloniality and violence, Quechua racialized labor and Spanish exploitation, and unequal access to formal schooling, which have impacted generations of Quechua women. Drawing from a larger narrative project with three generations…
Descriptors: Females, American Indians, Race, Colonialism
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Nemova, Olga A.; Retivina, Veronika V.; Kutepova, Lubov I.; Vinnikova, Irina S.; Kuznetsova, Ekaterina A. – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2016
The paper considers the issue of functioning of the mechanism of formation and translation of values of labor in family. Fundamental labor values and main channels of their distribution are revealed based on empiric material. Family influence on motivation of today's Russian youth's labor behavior was determined. An intergenerational comparative…
Descriptors: Family Influence, Foreign Countries, Values, Sociocultural Patterns
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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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Askari, Sabrina F.; Liss, Miriam; Erchull, Mindy J.; Staebell, Samantha E.; Axelson, Sarah J. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2010
This study explored whether there was a discrepancy between young adults' ideal and expected participation in household and child care chores as well as what variables predicted expectations for future chore division. Three-hundred fifty-eight unmarried, heterosexual participants with no children completed an online questionnaire assessing the…
Descriptors: Feminism, Females, Labor, Young Adults
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Poortman, Anne-Rigt; van der Lippe, Tanja – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2009
Research on the division of household labor has typically examined the role of time availability, relative resources, and gender ideology. We explore the gendered meaning of domestic work by examining the role of men's and women's attitudes toward household labor. Using data from the Dutch Time Competition Survey (N = 732), we find that women have…
Descriptors: Females, Labor, Housework, Males
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Robinson, Bryan K.; Hunter, Erica – Journal of Family Issues, 2008
This study examines a sample of 299 advertisements from 4 of the top 10 circulated magazines of 2005 to see how contemporary advertising depicts household labor. Modeling after previous studies that examined the depiction of gender in family advertising, this study seeks to determine whether advertising reflects the changes in families that have…
Descriptors: Advertising, Females, Ideology, Labor
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Davis, Shannon N.; Greenstein, Theodore N.; Marks, Jennifer P. Gerteisen – Journal of Family Issues, 2007
Using data from 17,636 respondents in 28 nations, this research uses multilevel modeling to compare the reported division of household labor and factors affecting it for currently married and currently cohabiting couples. Cohabiting men report performing more household labor than do married men, and cohabiting women report performing less…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Labor, Housework, Gender Differences
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L. Hook, Jennifer – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2004
The gendered division of household labor is more multifaceted than the allocation of paid work and domestic work. People also engage in volunteer work and informal support. I investigate the applicability of household labor allocation theories - specifically the time constraints, economic, and doing gender perspectives - to all unpaid work. I…
Descriptors: Volunteers, Least Squares Statistics, Labor, Diaries
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Cast, Alicia D.; Bird, Sharon R. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2005
Our work contributes to research on variation in role-taking by investigating changes in perceptions of role-taking ability over time as a result of exposure to situations and activities typically associated with others; that is, we investigate how "walking in others' shoes" contributes to individuals' perceptions of role-taking ability. Using a…
Descriptors: Spouses, Labor, Housework, Role
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Klumb, Petra; Hoppmann, Christiane; Staats, Melanie – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
On the basis of 52 German dual-earner couples with at least 1 child younger than 5 years, we tested the effects of an unequal division of labor on relationship satisfaction. We analyzed diary reports of time allocated to productive activities according to the actor-partner-interdependence model. Hierarchical linear models showed that rather than…
Descriptors: Labor, Employed Parents, Spouses, Models
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Cooke, Lynn Prince – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2004
The literature on the predictors of the division of household labor continues to expand, but the effect of this division on family outcomes has not been explored. Using the German SocioEconomic Panel (N= 628), I analyze the effect of men's participation in housework and child care on the likelihood of second birth and divorce. Fathers' greater…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor, Housework, Divorce
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Hartmann, Heidi I. – Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 1981
Suggests that the family, rather than being an active agent with unified interests, is a locus of struggle. Identifies and explores the material aspects of gender relations within family units, focusing on the nature of work people do in the family and their control over the products of their labor. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Capitalism, Conflict, Economic Factors, Family (Sociological Unit)
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Chen, Feinian – Social Forces, 2005
Highlighting one aspect of the economic transition in China (industrialization), this article focuses on how a change in employment from an agricultural to a non-agricultural job could change the household division of labor. Longitudinal analysis of data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey showed that such job shifts affected the household…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Industrialization, Career Change, Labor
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Baxter, Janeen – Journal of Family Issues, 2005
Data from an Australian national survey (1996 to 1997) are used to examine domestic labor patterns among de facto and married men and women. The results show that women spend more time on housework and do a greater proportion of housework than men. However, the patterns are most traditional among married men and women. Women in de facto…
Descriptors: Marriage, Females, Males, Marital Status
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