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Sonalde Desai, Department of Sociology at UMD
The Global Aspirational Class and Its Demographic Fortunes
Located in Coming Up
Gunnar Andersson, Stockholm University
Union formation in Sweden during the recent period of fertility decline: trends and correlates
Located in Coming Up
Rebecca Thornton, Baylor University
Long-Lasting Effects of Bible Translations on Literacy: Evidence from Sub-Sahara Africa
Located in Coming Up
Joint Presentation by: Sangeetha Madhavan, Kirsten Stoebenau, and Ken Leonard
Does Kinship Matter in Low Income Urban Contexts in sub-Saharan Africa?: New Findings from Nairobi, Kenya
Located in Coming Up
Leslie Root, University of Colorado - Boulder
The Life Course Fertility Effect of a Contraceptive Intervention: New Evidence from Colorado
Located in Coming Up
Nolan Pope, UMD (Economics)
Divorce, Family Arrangement, and Children's Outcomes
Located in Coming Up
FileMight the gender revolution strengthen the family?
MPRC Special Symposium
Located in Research / / Seminar Series / Seminar documents and flyers
The relationship between familial deaths and one's own mortality among Black Americans
Familial loss increases midlife mortality risk among Black Americans
Located in Research / Selected Research
Article Reference Troff document (with manpage macros)Are Children Barriers to the Gender Revolution? International Comparisons
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.
Located in Retired Persons / Frances Goldscheider, Ph.D. / Frances Goldscheider Publications
Differential convergence in twenty-first-century gender gaps in home tasks
Faculty Associate Liana Sayer finds that gendered norms associated with different forms of unpaid labors may be becoming redefined
Located in Research / Selected Research