Attitudes towards sharing housework in couple context: An empirical, factorial survey approach

Objective: This study measured and compared the attitudes of German women and men towards sharing total housework, routine housework and non-routine housework in couples. Background: Although attitudes towards gender roles and the notion of separate spheres are important for understanding many a...

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Main Author: Florian Schulz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bamberg Press 2020-10-01
Series:Journal of Family Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/jfr/index.php/jfr/article/view/419
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spelling doaj-9058952793f54028aa16a4fb3b9eefb62021-03-01T19:53:32ZengUniversity of Bamberg PressJournal of Family Research2699-23372020-10-0110.20377/jfr-419Attitudes towards sharing housework in couple context: An empirical, factorial survey approachFlorian Schulz0State Institute for Family Research at the University of Bamberg Objective: This study measured and compared the attitudes of German women and men towards sharing total housework, routine housework and non-routine housework in couples. Background: Although attitudes towards gender roles and the notion of separate spheres are important for understanding many aspects of family life, knowledge about situational variations of women’s and men’s attitudes towards housework sharing is limited. Method: Original data from a factorial survey of 1,120 German women and men from 2016 were used to describe variations in the attitudes of women and men towards three sets of housework using multilevel regression models. Results: Women and men expressed their attitudes towards equal sharing of total and routine housework, but non-routine housework was assigned to male partners in couples. Attitudes differed widely according to the context of the couple: In couples with similar economic resources, respondents favored equal sharing of housework, and in couples with unequal arrangements, the partner with fewer resources was tied to more housework and vice versa. Conclusion: When evaluating housework responsibilities, women and men in this study seemed to follow the principles of equity and balanced exchange. https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/jfr/index.php/jfr/article/view/419unpaid family workdivision of laborexperimental methodsgenderGermanycouple context
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Florian Schulz
spellingShingle Florian Schulz
Attitudes towards sharing housework in couple context: An empirical, factorial survey approach
Journal of Family Research
unpaid family work
division of labor
experimental methods
gender
Germany
couple context
author_facet Florian Schulz
author_sort Florian Schulz
title Attitudes towards sharing housework in couple context: An empirical, factorial survey approach
title_short Attitudes towards sharing housework in couple context: An empirical, factorial survey approach
title_full Attitudes towards sharing housework in couple context: An empirical, factorial survey approach
title_fullStr Attitudes towards sharing housework in couple context: An empirical, factorial survey approach
title_full_unstemmed Attitudes towards sharing housework in couple context: An empirical, factorial survey approach
title_sort attitudes towards sharing housework in couple context: an empirical, factorial survey approach
publisher University of Bamberg Press
series Journal of Family Research
issn 2699-2337
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Objective: This study measured and compared the attitudes of German women and men towards sharing total housework, routine housework and non-routine housework in couples. Background: Although attitudes towards gender roles and the notion of separate spheres are important for understanding many aspects of family life, knowledge about situational variations of women’s and men’s attitudes towards housework sharing is limited. Method: Original data from a factorial survey of 1,120 German women and men from 2016 were used to describe variations in the attitudes of women and men towards three sets of housework using multilevel regression models. Results: Women and men expressed their attitudes towards equal sharing of total and routine housework, but non-routine housework was assigned to male partners in couples. Attitudes differed widely according to the context of the couple: In couples with similar economic resources, respondents favored equal sharing of housework, and in couples with unequal arrangements, the partner with fewer resources was tied to more housework and vice versa. Conclusion: When evaluating housework responsibilities, women and men in this study seemed to follow the principles of equity and balanced exchange.
topic unpaid family work
division of labor
experimental methods
gender
Germany
couple context
url https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/jfr/index.php/jfr/article/view/419
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