This article investigates the relationship between sharing domestic tasks in dual-earner mixed-sex couples and using of paid domestic services. Results from a small-scale survey of the domestic outsourcing practices of employees of a large service-sector organisation in the UK show that in households: full-time working by women and presence of younger children is positively associated with using of domestic services; there is no association between the gender division of traditionally female domestic tasks carried out within the couple and paid services; in contrast, men’s greater involvement in traditionally male and traditionally gender-neutral tasks is positively associating with using paid domestic services. These findings tentatively s...
Recent changes in the labour force participation rates of men and women give rise to new questions r...
This article studies 28 dual-income Spanish childless couples who were undoing gender in routine dom...
What will be the long-term effect of the emerging predominance of the dual-earner family? Perhaps wo...
This article investigates the relationship between sharing domestic tasks in dual-earner mixed-sex c...
Research over the last decade has documented the return of paid domestic labour across many European...
AbstractProblem Statement: We currently live in a society where men are increasingly involved in dom...
Most research on gender divisions of housework focuses on couple and family households. This article...
We use data from matched dual earner couples from the Australian Time Use Survey 2006 (n\ua0=\ua0926...
This thesis examines whether paid employment in the public or private sector shapes the division of ...
One of the most pressing issues contributing to the persistence of gender inequality is the gendered...
Recent changes in the labour force participation rates of men and women give rise to new questions r...
This paper is concerned to evaluate recent arguments about changes in the domestic division of labou...
Abstract Problem Statement: We currently live in a society where men are increasingly involved in do...
The outsourcing of domestic tasks is an important strategy for coping with the competing time claims...
The outsourcing of domestic tasks is an important strategy for coping with the competing time claims...
Recent changes in the labour force participation rates of men and women give rise to new questions r...
This article studies 28 dual-income Spanish childless couples who were undoing gender in routine dom...
What will be the long-term effect of the emerging predominance of the dual-earner family? Perhaps wo...
This article investigates the relationship between sharing domestic tasks in dual-earner mixed-sex c...
Research over the last decade has documented the return of paid domestic labour across many European...
AbstractProblem Statement: We currently live in a society where men are increasingly involved in dom...
Most research on gender divisions of housework focuses on couple and family households. This article...
We use data from matched dual earner couples from the Australian Time Use Survey 2006 (n\ua0=\ua0926...
This thesis examines whether paid employment in the public or private sector shapes the division of ...
One of the most pressing issues contributing to the persistence of gender inequality is the gendered...
Recent changes in the labour force participation rates of men and women give rise to new questions r...
This paper is concerned to evaluate recent arguments about changes in the domestic division of labou...
Abstract Problem Statement: We currently live in a society where men are increasingly involved in do...
The outsourcing of domestic tasks is an important strategy for coping with the competing time claims...
The outsourcing of domestic tasks is an important strategy for coping with the competing time claims...
Recent changes in the labour force participation rates of men and women give rise to new questions r...
This article studies 28 dual-income Spanish childless couples who were undoing gender in routine dom...
What will be the long-term effect of the emerging predominance of the dual-earner family? Perhaps wo...