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Showing 301 to 315 of 458 results Save | Export
Govako, Boris Ivanovich – Soviet Education, 1990
Presents results of survey and questionnaire research on how both single and married young people spend their leisure time in the Soviet Union. Finds that a number of traditional leisure pastimes are being crowded out by new technical and artistic activities. Expresses concern that student families have little leisure time largely because of…
Descriptors: Extracurricular Activities, Family Life, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Perry-Jenkins, Maureen; Crouter, Ann C. – Journal of Family Issues, 1990
Examined spousal division of work inside and outside family home in couples (N=43) and cognitions men attach to their work and family roles. Found men's provider-role attitudes were related to their family work involvement. Found congruence of role beliefs and role behavior within home related to higher levels of marital satisfaction for men.…
Descriptors: Family Income, Family Structure, Housework, Males
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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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Erickson, Rebecca J. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2005
Attempting to explain why biological sex remains the primary predictor of household labor allocation, gender theorists have suggested that husbands and wives perform family work in ways that facilitate culturally appropriate constructions of gender. To date, however, researchers have yet to consider the theoretical and empirical significance of…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Role Perception, Housework, Surveys
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Solomon, Catherine Richards; Acock, Alan C.; Walker, Alexis J. – Journal of Family Issues, 2004
Using data from the National Survey of Families and Households, we assessed change in the relation between gender ideology and investment in routine chores across the retirement transition. Retirement may change the relation between ideology and household labor because the direct influence of time pressures is minimized. Specifically, men who have…
Descriptors: Ideology, Retirement, Males, Housework
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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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van de Rijt, Arnout; Macy, Michael W. – Social Forces, 2006
A division of labor is mediated by exchange of valued goods and services. We use social exchange theory to extend this principal to "labors of love." Sexual activity in a close personal relationship seems outside the domain of bargaining and exchange. Nevertheless, we explore the possibility that this most intimate of human relations is influenced…
Descriptors: Evidence, Interpersonal Attraction, Interpersonal Relationship, Sexuality
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de Graaf, Paul M.; Kalmijn, Matthijs – Journal of Family Issues, 2006
Using survey data on 1,718 ever-divorced men and women in the Netherlands, the authors describe the motives people give for their divorce. The authors distinguish motives regarding three types of issues: relational issues, behavioral problems, and problems about work and the division of labor. They observe three important trends: the normalization…
Descriptors: Housework, Behavior Problems, Divorce, Foreign Countries
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Stafford, Frank; Duncan, Greg – 1977
In this paper, the life cycle and comparative static models of time are used to interpret household behavior as measured by data collected in the Time Use Survey, a national probability sample of U.S. households conducted by the Survey Research Center of the University of Michigan in 1975-76. Also, some time-series comparisons are made by…
Descriptors: Consumer Science, Employment, Home Management, Housework
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Peters, Jeanne M.; Haldeman, Virginia A. – Journal of Family Issues, 1987
Compared the time-use in household work of school-age children in single-parent/one-earner, two-parent/one-earner, and two-parent/two earner households (N=170). Children in two-parent families were found to spend less actual and relative amounts of time on all household work than children in single-parent families. (Author/ABL)
Descriptors: Child Responsibility, Children, Employed Parents, Family (Sociological Unit)
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Motroshilova, Nelya V. – International Social Science Journal, 1983
Women in the Soviet Union are guaranteed equal rights and opportunities and participate fully in the Soviet economy. Despite their achievements, Soviet women still have difficulties in entering and achieving high-level positions in traditionally male fields and in getting men to do their share of household work. (IS)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Females, Feminism
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Berger, Peggy S. – Home Economics Research Journal, 1984
This review of the six stages of development of home management research and of changes in methodology and researcher qualifications illustrates increasing sophistication in research design and technique. (SK)
Descriptors: Home Economics, Home Management, Housework, Research Methodology
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Duncan, Otis Dudley – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1982
In a study of sex typing of children's household chores, older women were more likely to reject sex typing in 1953 but less likely to do so than younger women in 1971 and 1976. The pattern of changes reflects a model which predicts generational fluctuations in group behavior. (Author/MJL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attitude Change, Attitudes, Cohort Analysis
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Schafer, Robert B.; Keith, Patricia M. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1981
Couples (N=336) were interviewed for their perceptions of the fairness of their own and their spouses's efforts in the family roles of cooking, housekeeping, provider, companion, and parent. Perceived equity in family roles tended to increase over the life cycle for both husbands and wives, but some differences existed. (Author)
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Family Life, Housework, Interpersonal Relationship
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Sanchez, Laura – Social Forces, 1994
Data from the 1988 National Survey of Families and Households indicate that men's housework and child-rearing efforts are powerful determinants of wives' and husbands' perceptions of the fairness of the division of household chores. Wives' employment hours have no effect on husbands' fairness perceptions but are significantly related to wives'…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Family Life, Females, Housework
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