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Hofferth honored by American Sociological Association
Section on Sociology of the Family to present the 2012 Distinguished Career Award at ASA Annual Meeting
Located in News
Frances Goldscheider honored by Stockholm University
Awarded honorary doctorate for contributions to Social Science
Located in News
Hofferth decries politicization of health care in Baltimore Sun Op-Ed
Calls statements by Eric Cantor and others a "red herring" to avoid uncomfortable policy questions
Located in News
Hofferth study challenges common wisdom about single parenting
Income level, not family structure, has the biggest impact on parenting practices
Located in News
Article Reference Troff document (with manpage macros)Gender Differences in Contribution to Domestic work Associated with Outsourcing in Korea
With a rapid economic achievement, education and socio-economic status of Korean women has also considerably improved. 40.0% of total women held bachelor’s degrees in 2015, which was only 1.6% in 1970. College entrance rate of women was estimated at 32.4% in 1990 but increased to 73.5% in 2017, even higher than men (66.3%). As more women are educated and employed conflicting with traditional gender role and values, one of strategies to deal with housework or childcare is outsourcing. According to the Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs (2015), 25% of married couples with children received help from their parents for housework or childcare, and it increased to 53% for dual earning couples. Choi (2016) explains that married couples depend on their parents and babysitters for young children, while they depend on nursery and kindergarten as children get older. Then how much does outsourcing reduce a demand for housework and childcare? Will it change the contribution to domestic work between couple? Despite the prevalence of domestic outsourcing in Korea, none of previous studies have investigated its relationship with couple’s time worked at home. In this paper, we examine how paid or unpaid helper is associated with time spent on housework or childcare by wife and husband respectively, using panel data for nine years with individual fixed effects. We also examine how the outsourcing is associated with husband’s relative contribution to domestic work compared to wife, by types of housework.
Located in MPRC People / Jinhee Kim, Ph.D. / JinHee Kim Publications
Time Use Data Access System
Sandra Hofferth continues Time Use project to extend data "backwards through time and geographically across countries"
Located in Research / Selected Research
Kim and Falconier: Promoting healthy couple relationships
The study will test interventions to promote marital and economic health among low-income couples in Virginia and Maryland
Located in Research / Selected Research
Dan Tang, Visiting Associate Professor in Maryland Population Research Center
Living Arrangements, Social Networks and Depressive Symptoms Among Urban and Rural Older Adults in China
Located in Coming Up
Maria Stanfors, Lund University, Sweden
Two for the price of one? Economic consequences of motherhood in contemporary Sweden.
Located in Coming Up
Journal Club - Edmond Shenassa, Professor of Family Science
Income Inequality and US Children’s Secondhand Smoke Exposure: Distinct Associations by Race–Ethnicity
Located in Coming Up