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Are Children Barriers to the Gender Revolution? International Comparisons
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Children seem to present a barrier to the gender revolution in that parents are more likely to divide paid and domestic work along traditional gender lines than childless couples are. However, the extent to which this is so varies between countries and over time. We used data on 35 countries from the 2012 International Social Survey Programme to identify the contexts in which parents and non-parents differ the most in their division of labour. In Central/South America, Eastern Europe, Southern Europe, Asia, and South Africa, labour sharing configurations did not vary as much with the presence of children as in Australia, Western Europe, North America, and Northern Europe. Our multilevel models helped explain this pattern by showing that children seem to present a greater barrier to the gender revolution in richer and, surprisingly, more gender equal countries. However, the relationship between children and couples’ division of labour can be thought of as curvilinear, first increasing as societies progress, but then weakening if societies respond with policies that promote men’s involvement at home. In particular, having a portion of parental leave reserved for fathers reduces the extent to which children are associated with traditional labour sharing in the domestic sphere.
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MPRC People
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Frances Goldscheider, Ph.D.
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Frances Goldscheider Publications
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Gender&Family Brownbag: Janet Gornick
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CUNY and Luxembourg Income Study, Title TBA.
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Coming Up
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Gender&Family Brownbag: For the Family: How Class and Gender Shape Women's Work
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Sarah Damaske, Penn State
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Coming Up
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Gender&Family Brownbag: Accounting for (Lack of) Involvement: Reasons for Fathers' Level of Involvement with Children in Parents' Magazine, 1926-2006
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Kathleen Denny, Shanna Brewton-Tiayon, Lucia Lykke and Melissa Milkie, University of Maryland
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Coming Up
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Gender&Family Brownbag: Recession and Divorce in the United States: Economic Conditions and the Odds of Divorce, 2007-2009
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Faculty Associate Philip Cohen speaks
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Coming Up
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Love, money, and parental goods: Does parental matchmaking matter?
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While parental matchmaking has been widespread throughout history and across countries, we know little about the relationship between parental matchmaking and marriage outcomes. Does parental involvement in matchmaking help ensure their needs are better taken care of by married children? This paper finds supportive evidence using a survey of Chinese couples. In particular, parental involvement in matchmaking is associated with having a more submissive wife, a greater number of children, a higher likelihood of having any male children, and a stronger belief of the husband in providing old age support to his parents. These benefits, however, are achieved at the cost of less marital harmony within the couple and lower market income of the wife. The results render support to and extend the findings of Becker, Murphy and Spenkuch (2015) where parents meddle with children's preferences to ensure their commitment to providing parental goods such as old age support.
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Retired Persons
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Ginger Zhe Jin, Ph.D.
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Ginger Zhe Jin Publications