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Schneider, Daniel – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2011
I examine the contested finding that men and women engage in gender performance through housework. Prior scholarship has found a curvilinear association between earnings share and housework that has been interpreted as evidence of gender performance. I reexamine these findings by conducting the first such analysis to use high-quality time diary…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Females, Housework, Males
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Geist, Claudia; Cohen, Philip N. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2011
This paper examines gendered housework in the larger context of comparative social change, asking specifically whether cross-national differences in domestic labor patterns converge over time. Our analysis of data from 13 countries (N = 11,065) from the 1994 and 2002 International Social Survey Program (ISSP) confirmed that social context matters…
Descriptors: Social Change, Housework, Social Environment, Gender Bias
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Shauman, Kimberlee A. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2010
This paper examines gender inequality in the determinants of job-related long-distance migration among married dual-earner couples during the 1980s and 1990s. The analysis tested the structural explanation, which attributes gender asymmetry in family migration to structural inequality in the labor market, and the comparative advantage explanation…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Migration, Gender Differences, Sex Fairness
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Petersen, Trond; Penner, Andrew M.; Hogsnes, Geir – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2010
The motherhood wage penalty is a substantial obstacle to progress in gender equality at work. Using matched employer-employee data from Norway (1979-1996, N = 236,857 individuals, N = 1,027,462 individual-years), a country with public policies that promote combining family and career, we investigate (a) whether the penalty arises from differential…
Descriptors: Wages, Employment Level, Mothers, Foreign Countries
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Lee, Kristen Schultz; Tufis, Paula A.; Alwin, Duane F. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2010
This research investigates change in gender beliefs in Japan during a period of economic hard times in the late 1990s. Using data from the International Social Survey Programme on the Japanese population from 1994 (n = 1,054) and 2002 (n = 872), we examined how cohort replacement and intracohort change contributed to changes in gender beliefs. We…
Descriptors: Labor Force Nonparticipants, Sanctions, Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries
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Craig, Lyn; Mullan, Killian – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2010
Research has associated parenthood with greater daily time commitments for fathers and mothers than for childless men and women, and with deeper gendered division of labor in households. How do these outcomes vary across countries with different average employment hours, family and social policies, and cultural attitudes to family care provision?…
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries, Family Work Relationship, Gender Differences
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Greenstein, Theodore N. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2009
This study uses data from married women in 30 nations to examine justice processes involving perceptions of fairness of the division of household labor and satisfaction with family life. Relative deprivation theory suggests that national context--operationalized here as nation-level gender equity--might serve as a comparative referent used by…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Females, Family Life, Role Perception
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Quek, Karen Mui-Teng; Knudson-Martin, Carmen – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
This study examines gender construction among dual-career newlywed couples in a collectivist culture. A qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews with 20 heterosexual Singaporean couples reveals aspects of the collectivist norms (e.g., doing family, we-consciousness, marrying one's equal) that are favorable toward the development of gender…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Sex Fairness, Marriage, Family Work Relationship
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Cooke, Lynn Prince – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2007
We are only beginning to unravel the mechanisms by which the division of domestic tasks varies in its sociopolitical context. Selecting couples from the German SocioEconomic Panel who married between 1990 and 1995 in the former East and West regions of Germany and following them until 2000 (N= 348 couples), I find evidence of direct, interaction,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sex Fairness, Housework, Fathers
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Lewin-Epstein, Noah; Stier, Haya; Braun, Michael – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
We compare the patterns of household division of labor in Germany and Israel--two countries that share key elements of the corporatist welfare regime but differ in their gender regimes--and evaluate several hypotheses using data from the 2002 International Social Survey Program. Although time constraints and relative resources affect the division…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis, Housework, Surveys
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Winslow-Bowe, Sarah – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
Recent reports using cross-sectional data indicate an increase in the percentage of wives who outearn their husbands, yet we know little about the persistence of wives' income advantage. The present analyses utilize the 1990-1994 waves of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 (N = 3,481) to examine wives' long-term earnings advantage.…
Descriptors: Spouses, Females, Persistence, Income