The transition from a family economy in which incomes were democratically secured through the best efforts of all family members to one in which men supported dependent wives and children appears as a watershed in many otherwise very different histories of the family. It looms large in both orthodox economic analyses of historical trends in female participation rates and feminist depictions of a symbiotic structural relationship between inherited patriarchal relationships and nascent industrial capitalism. Both camps agree, as Creighton has recently put it, about “the out-lines of [the] development” of the male breadwinner family. Where they disagree is in “the factors responsible for its origins and expansion”. Why did families move away f...
Copyright confirmation in progress. Any queries to umer-enquiries@unimelb.edu.auThe breadwinner mode...
has published widely in British, American, and Australian economic history. ABSTRACT: Based on a 189...
We explore the effects of gender inequality and women’s disempowerment in the context of hist...
Development economists have long studied the relationship between gender equality and economic growt...
This article provides a novel framework within which to evaluate real household incomes of predomina...
The nineteenth century saw the expansion of capitalist relations of production in Britain. It was a ...
This thesis is concerned with men's attitudes towards the breadwinner role. A representative sample...
In the United Kingdom, the decline of the ‘male breadwinner model’ resulting from structural changes...
We develop a typology for understanding couple households where the female is the major earner – wha...
It is sometimes hard to imagine that it has been less than 100 years since women in the United State...
Economists have spent a good deal of time examining and trying to explain the positive association b...
Did the male breadwinner get more household resources, and if so, why? A dearth of direct informatio...
This article explores the effects of gender inequality and women's disempowerment in the context of ...
In this paper we use the logic of contractual relationships within the family to explore how technol...
Although the father-centered family was a powerful instrument of social control in the Victorian per...
Copyright confirmation in progress. Any queries to umer-enquiries@unimelb.edu.auThe breadwinner mode...
has published widely in British, American, and Australian economic history. ABSTRACT: Based on a 189...
We explore the effects of gender inequality and women’s disempowerment in the context of hist...
Development economists have long studied the relationship between gender equality and economic growt...
This article provides a novel framework within which to evaluate real household incomes of predomina...
The nineteenth century saw the expansion of capitalist relations of production in Britain. It was a ...
This thesis is concerned with men's attitudes towards the breadwinner role. A representative sample...
In the United Kingdom, the decline of the ‘male breadwinner model’ resulting from structural changes...
We develop a typology for understanding couple households where the female is the major earner – wha...
It is sometimes hard to imagine that it has been less than 100 years since women in the United State...
Economists have spent a good deal of time examining and trying to explain the positive association b...
Did the male breadwinner get more household resources, and if so, why? A dearth of direct informatio...
This article explores the effects of gender inequality and women's disempowerment in the context of ...
In this paper we use the logic of contractual relationships within the family to explore how technol...
Although the father-centered family was a powerful instrument of social control in the Victorian per...
Copyright confirmation in progress. Any queries to umer-enquiries@unimelb.edu.auThe breadwinner mode...
has published widely in British, American, and Australian economic history. ABSTRACT: Based on a 189...
We explore the effects of gender inequality and women’s disempowerment in the context of hist...