none3siComparing West Germany and the U.S., we analyze the association between equity—in terms of the relative gender division of paid and unpaid work hours—and the risk of marriage dissolution. Our aim is to identify under what conditions equity influences couple stability. We apply event-history analysis to marriage histories using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel for West Germany and the Panel Study of Income Dynamics for the U.S. for the period 1986–2009/10. For the U.S., we find that deviation from equity is particularly destabilizing when the wife underbenefits, especially when both partners’ paid work hours are similar. In West Germany, equity is less salient. Instead, we find that the male breadwinner model remains the sing...
Divorce rates in Germany have been increasing since the mid-1960s, however, over the last 15 years t...
Americans work more than Europeans. Using micro data from the U.S. and 17 European countries, we stu...
Living arrangements have undergone considerable change in recent decades. In most Western countries ...
Comparing West Germany and the U.S., we analyze the association between equity—in terms of the relat...
Objective: To examine the association between divorce and partners' allocation of paid and unpaid wo...
Many hail wives ’ part-time employment as a work–family balance strategy, but theories offer competi...
There was a time when the prevailing opinion about family relations was that couple specialization (...
Using German panel data from 1984 to 2007, we analyze the impact of labor division between husband a...
Objective: In comparing East and West Germany, we investigate task specialization and its associatio...
Gender relations remain embedded in their sociopolitical context. Compared here using event-history ...
I examine the trajectory of marital quality as a function of rela-tionship equity with data from a s...
Gender relations remain embedded in their sociopolitical context. Compared here using event-history ...
We theorize how social policy affects marital stability vis-à-vis macro and micro effects of wives' ...
Many hail wives’ part-time employment as a work—family balance strategy, but theories offer competin...
This paper examines a topic of continuing interest for demographers and sociolo-gists of the family:...
Divorce rates in Germany have been increasing since the mid-1960s, however, over the last 15 years t...
Americans work more than Europeans. Using micro data from the U.S. and 17 European countries, we stu...
Living arrangements have undergone considerable change in recent decades. In most Western countries ...
Comparing West Germany and the U.S., we analyze the association between equity—in terms of the relat...
Objective: To examine the association between divorce and partners' allocation of paid and unpaid wo...
Many hail wives ’ part-time employment as a work–family balance strategy, but theories offer competi...
There was a time when the prevailing opinion about family relations was that couple specialization (...
Using German panel data from 1984 to 2007, we analyze the impact of labor division between husband a...
Objective: In comparing East and West Germany, we investigate task specialization and its associatio...
Gender relations remain embedded in their sociopolitical context. Compared here using event-history ...
I examine the trajectory of marital quality as a function of rela-tionship equity with data from a s...
Gender relations remain embedded in their sociopolitical context. Compared here using event-history ...
We theorize how social policy affects marital stability vis-à-vis macro and micro effects of wives' ...
Many hail wives’ part-time employment as a work—family balance strategy, but theories offer competin...
This paper examines a topic of continuing interest for demographers and sociolo-gists of the family:...
Divorce rates in Germany have been increasing since the mid-1960s, however, over the last 15 years t...
Americans work more than Europeans. Using micro data from the U.S. and 17 European countries, we stu...
Living arrangements have undergone considerable change in recent decades. In most Western countries ...