This article investigates cross-national patterns in the gender division of housework in coresident couples. By using Generations and Gender Survey (GGS) data, we assess four key hypotheses proposed in the literature: namely, the relative resources approach (the partner who earns less does more housework), the time availability perspective (the partner who spends less time doing paid work does more housework), the economic dependency model (the partner who contributes proportionally less to the household income does more housework), and the gender ideology perspective (the beliefs on gender roles influence housework sharing in a couple), thereby verifying the presence of gender display. Our results reaffirm the significance of gender ideolo...
This article studies the relationship between household income and housework time across 33 countrie...
In the 21st century, the division of housework remains gendered, with women on average still spendin...
Empirical evidence from developed countries consistently shows that working wives remain responsible...
This article investigates cross-national patterns in the gender division of housework in coresident ...
This paper explores cross-country variation in the relationship between division of housework and wi...
AbstractIn the 21st century, the division of housework remains gendered, with women on average still...
Individuals who espouse an egalitarian gender ideology as well as economically independent women ben...
This article compares the gendered allocation of household labor between married and cohabiting coup...
he paper focuses on the factors which influence the sharing of domestic work in European countries. ...
We offer new evidence on multi-level determinants of the gender division of housework. Using data fr...
This article compares the gendered allocation of household labor between married and cohabiting coup...
Despite many studies on the gendered division of housework, there is little research on how couples ...
We analyze couples’ time-use diaries from the 2012–2013 Life in Kyrgyzstan data. Using the pooled Bl...
This chapter reviews the main theoretical perspectives and key recent empirical research on the gend...
Background: Dual-earner families are widespread in contemporary Europe, yet the division of housewor...
This article studies the relationship between household income and housework time across 33 countrie...
In the 21st century, the division of housework remains gendered, with women on average still spendin...
Empirical evidence from developed countries consistently shows that working wives remain responsible...
This article investigates cross-national patterns in the gender division of housework in coresident ...
This paper explores cross-country variation in the relationship between division of housework and wi...
AbstractIn the 21st century, the division of housework remains gendered, with women on average still...
Individuals who espouse an egalitarian gender ideology as well as economically independent women ben...
This article compares the gendered allocation of household labor between married and cohabiting coup...
he paper focuses on the factors which influence the sharing of domestic work in European countries. ...
We offer new evidence on multi-level determinants of the gender division of housework. Using data fr...
This article compares the gendered allocation of household labor between married and cohabiting coup...
Despite many studies on the gendered division of housework, there is little research on how couples ...
We analyze couples’ time-use diaries from the 2012–2013 Life in Kyrgyzstan data. Using the pooled Bl...
This chapter reviews the main theoretical perspectives and key recent empirical research on the gend...
Background: Dual-earner families are widespread in contemporary Europe, yet the division of housewor...
This article studies the relationship between household income and housework time across 33 countrie...
In the 21st century, the division of housework remains gendered, with women on average still spendin...
Empirical evidence from developed countries consistently shows that working wives remain responsible...