This research examines factors that may explain why full-time employed wives, despite performing more housework than their full-time employed husbands, fail to report that an unequal division of household labor is unfair. Using interview data for 25 dual-earner couples, this article explores the relationships of valued outcomes, justifications, and choice of comparison referents to perceptions of fairness in the division of household labor. The data show that both husbands and wives positively value some aspects and outcomes of household tasks. The data also provide a basis for describing how spouses\u27 use of justifications helps to explain the maintenance of inequality in the division of labor. Finally, the data demonstrate that spouses\...
We examine how three types of marital commitment—personal, structural, and moral—are associated with...
This paper investigates husbands' and wives' perceptions of fairness of the domestic division of lab...
This study explores the relationship between the actual division of housework and men’s and women’s ...
This research examines factors that may explain why full-time employed wives, despite performing mor...
This research examines the role of fairness in household labor allocation decisions and evaluations....
The primary aim of this investigation was to empirically examine facets of Thompson's (1991) model o...
Using the first wave of the National Survey of Families and Households (NSFH-I), we analyze the join...
We analyze the theoretical basis on which wives and husbands evaluate the fairness of the division o...
This article uses data from couples in 29 nations to investigate the associations between household ...
This study examined the relationship between relational uncertainty and perceptions of division of h...
Previous studies of work/family linkages have emphasized the effects of one domain or the other on t...
<div><p>Married women often undertake a larger share of housework in many countries and yet they do ...
There is a demonstrated relationship between couples’ division of household chores—and, to a lesser ...
The theoretical basis on which wives and husbands in the United States evaluate the fairness of the ...
The purpose of this research is to examine married women’s perceptions of the division of household ...
We examine how three types of marital commitment—personal, structural, and moral—are associated with...
This paper investigates husbands' and wives' perceptions of fairness of the domestic division of lab...
This study explores the relationship between the actual division of housework and men’s and women’s ...
This research examines factors that may explain why full-time employed wives, despite performing mor...
This research examines the role of fairness in household labor allocation decisions and evaluations....
The primary aim of this investigation was to empirically examine facets of Thompson's (1991) model o...
Using the first wave of the National Survey of Families and Households (NSFH-I), we analyze the join...
We analyze the theoretical basis on which wives and husbands evaluate the fairness of the division o...
This article uses data from couples in 29 nations to investigate the associations between household ...
This study examined the relationship between relational uncertainty and perceptions of division of h...
Previous studies of work/family linkages have emphasized the effects of one domain or the other on t...
<div><p>Married women often undertake a larger share of housework in many countries and yet they do ...
There is a demonstrated relationship between couples’ division of household chores—and, to a lesser ...
The theoretical basis on which wives and husbands in the United States evaluate the fairness of the ...
The purpose of this research is to examine married women’s perceptions of the division of household ...
We examine how three types of marital commitment—personal, structural, and moral—are associated with...
This paper investigates husbands' and wives' perceptions of fairness of the domestic division of lab...
This study explores the relationship between the actual division of housework and men’s and women’s ...