International audienceBackground: Women, who generally do more unpaid and less paid work than men, have greater incentives to stay in marriages than cohabiting unions, which generally carry fewer legal protections for individuals that wish to dissolve their relationship. The extent to which cohabitation is institutionalized, however, is a matter of policy and varies substantially by country. The gender gap in paid and unpaid work between married and cohabiting individuals should be larger in countries where cohabitation is less institutionalized and where those in cohabiting relationships have relatively fewer legal protections should the relationship dissolve, yet few studies have explored this variation.Objective: Using time diary data fr...
This article builds on time use data to explore cross-country differences between Austria, Italy and...
Using data from 17,636 respondents in 28 nations, this research uses multilevel modeling to compare ...
This paper aims to explain why the division of domestic labor within couples differs according to th...
International audienceBackground: Women, who generally do more unpaid and less paid work than men, h...
BACKGROUND—Women, who generally do more unpaid and less paid work than men, have greater incentives ...
This article compares the gendered allocation of household labor between married and cohabiting coup...
This article compares the gendered allocation of household labor between married and cohabiting coup...
Objective: This article analyses changes from 2003 to 2014 in the magnitude and directions of family...
Objective: To examine the association between divorce and partners' allocation of paid and unpaid wo...
The literature suggests that in Italy husbands contribute less to unpaid household work than in any ...
Italy is characterized by a very uneven distribution of paid and unpaid work in gender terms. Italy ...
Abstarct: Italy is characterized by a very uneven distribution of paid and unpaid work in gender ter...
This article examines the differences between currently married and currently cohabiting couples in ...
Empirical evidence has shown that married men generally earn more and married women earn less than t...
This article analyses the extent to which changes in household composition over the life course affe...
This article builds on time use data to explore cross-country differences between Austria, Italy and...
Using data from 17,636 respondents in 28 nations, this research uses multilevel modeling to compare ...
This paper aims to explain why the division of domestic labor within couples differs according to th...
International audienceBackground: Women, who generally do more unpaid and less paid work than men, h...
BACKGROUND—Women, who generally do more unpaid and less paid work than men, have greater incentives ...
This article compares the gendered allocation of household labor between married and cohabiting coup...
This article compares the gendered allocation of household labor between married and cohabiting coup...
Objective: This article analyses changes from 2003 to 2014 in the magnitude and directions of family...
Objective: To examine the association between divorce and partners' allocation of paid and unpaid wo...
The literature suggests that in Italy husbands contribute less to unpaid household work than in any ...
Italy is characterized by a very uneven distribution of paid and unpaid work in gender terms. Italy ...
Abstarct: Italy is characterized by a very uneven distribution of paid and unpaid work in gender ter...
This article examines the differences between currently married and currently cohabiting couples in ...
Empirical evidence has shown that married men generally earn more and married women earn less than t...
This article analyses the extent to which changes in household composition over the life course affe...
This article builds on time use data to explore cross-country differences between Austria, Italy and...
Using data from 17,636 respondents in 28 nations, this research uses multilevel modeling to compare ...
This paper aims to explain why the division of domestic labor within couples differs according to th...