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Female breadwinner – Erwerbsentscheidungen von Frauen im Haushaltskontext

Nach wie vor ist die ungleiche Verteilung von Erwerbs- und Familienarbeit zwischen den Partnern der Regelfall. Traditionelle familiäre Arrangements werden dabei durch institutionelle Rahmenbedingungen bevorzugt. Die Folge ist, dass Frauen immer noch beruflich zurückstecken - auch wenn sie den Hauptteil des Haushaltseinkommens erarbeiten und damit die Rolle der Familienernährerin übernehmen.

Diese Infoplattform widmet sich den Bedingungen und Auswirkungen der Erwerbsentscheidung von Frauen sowie empirischen Studien, die sich mit der Arbeitsteilung der Partner im Haushaltskontext befassen.

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  • Literaturhinweis

    When mothers do it all: gender-role norms, women's employment, and fertility intentions in post-industrial societies (2024)

    Han, Sinn Won ; Gowen, Ohjae ; Brinton, Mary C.;

    Zitatform

    Han, Sinn Won, Ohjae Gowen & Mary C. Brinton (2024): When mothers do it all: gender-role norms, women's employment, and fertility intentions in post-industrial societies. In: European Sociological Review, Jg. 40, H. 2, S. 309-325. DOI:10.1093/esr/jcad036

    Abstract

    "Post-industrial countries with high rates of female labour force participation have generally had low fertility rates, but recent studies demonstrate that this is no longer the case. This has generated increased attention to how greater gender equality in the private sphere of the household may contribute to a positive relationship between women’s employment rates and fertility. Building on recent scholarship demonstrating the multidimensionality of gender-role attitudes, we argue that conversely, the prevalence of a gender-role ideology that supports women’s employment but places greater priority on their role as caregivers may depress the higher-order fertility intentions of working mothers. Using data from 25 European countries, we find that this type of gender-role ideology (egalitarian familism) moderates the relationship between mothers’ full-time employment and their intention to have a second child. This holds even after accounting for key features of the policy environment that are likely to mitigate work–family conflict. The analysis suggests that conflicting normative expectations for women’s work and family roles tend to dampen working mothers’ second-order fertility intentions, independent of work–family reconciliation policies." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Adjustments in women's labour force participation in response to the deterioration of the labour market situation of the male partner (2024)

    Matysiak, Anna ; Kurowska, Anna ; Pavelea, Alina Maria;

    Zitatform

    Matysiak, Anna, Anna Kurowska & Alina Maria Pavelea (2024): Adjustments in women's labour force participation in response to the deterioration of the labour market situation of the male partner. (SocArXiv papers), 86 S. DOI:10.31235/osf.io/bn4re

    Abstract

    "Earnings constitute one of the most important sources of income for most of the European families. In this context, growing instability of employment relations and the spread of nonstandard employment – which is usually less secure and less paid than standard employment – pose serious financial risks to families, especially the traditional and modernised male breadwinner couples which rely on one income. Such couples still constitute around 20%-50% of couples in the European Union. In this report, we examined one particular resilience strategy these couples may develop in case of men's entry to unemployment or involuntary nonstandard employment, namely woman's increase in her labor supply. We also investigate the role of country-specific policies in moderating her response. To this end, we conducted three empirical studies based on EU-SILC and EU LFS data which were complemented with policy indicators derived from EUROMOD and UKMOD. Our findings suggest that women living in (modernized) male breadwinner couples indeed react to the deterioration in men’s employment situation though this reaction is relatively weak. Namely, not more than 10% of women who were inactive or worked part-time prior to the deterioration of his employment situation increase their labor supply. This response is stronger in countries with better public childcare (though only in case of his entry into involuntary nonstandard employment and not unemployment) and lower marginal tax rates. Notably, it is not affected by the generosity of the social benefits." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Family dissolution and labour supply decisions over the life cycle (2019)

    Cavapozzi, Danilo; Fiore, Simona; Pasini, Giacomo;

    Zitatform

    Cavapozzi, Danilo, Simona Fiore & Giacomo Pasini (2019): Family dissolution and labour supply decisions over the life cycle. In: A. Börsch-Supan, J. Bristle, K. Andersen-Ranberg, A. Brugiavini, F. Jusot, H. Litwin & G. Weber (Hrsg.) (2019): Health and socio-economic status over the life course : First results from SHARE Waves 6 and 7, S. 149-155. DOI:10.1515/9783110617245-015

    Abstract

    "Our study findings suggest strong gender differences in the effect of household dissolution on employment probability. Whereas household dissolution has a negligible effect on men's employment behaviour, the employment probability of women increases by 4.4 per cent during the year of a household split and by 8.6 per cent during the year of divorce. The effect is driven by women with children. Although both household split and divorce shape women labour supply also after their occurrence, we found an anticipated effect on employment choices only for divorce. This pattern might be driven by the choice of women to undertake job search activities only after they stop living as a couple with their former partners. Finally, we consistently find lower magnitudes when looking at household splits compared with divorce, for both men and women.
    The policy implication of these findings is that once within-family income support disappears because a family dissolves, those more at risk - women out of the labour force with dependent children - should be given assistance to manage their work and family responsibilities. Access to childcare services and flexible work arrangements may help smooth the consequences of family dissolution." (Text excerpt, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Learning from mum: Cross-national evidence linking maternal employment and adult children's outcomes (2019)

    McGinn, Kathleen L.; Castro, Mayra Ruiz; Lingo, Elizabeth Long;

    Zitatform

    McGinn, Kathleen L., Mayra Ruiz Castro & Elizabeth Long Lingo (2019): Learning from mum: Cross-national evidence linking maternal employment and adult children's outcomes. In: Work, employment and society, Jg. 33, H. 3, S. 374-400. DOI:10.1177/0950017018760167

    Abstract

    "Analyses relying on two international surveys from over 100,000 men and women across 29 countries explore the relationship between maternal employment and adult daughters' and sons' employment and domestic outcomes. In the employment sphere, adult daughters, but not sons, of employed mothers are more likely to be employed and, if employed, are more likely to hold supervisory responsibility, work more hours and earn higher incomes than their peers whose mothers were not employed. In the domestic sphere, sons raised by employed mothers spend more time caring for family members and daughters spend less time on housework. Analyses provide evidence for two mechanisms: gender attitudes and social learning. Finally, findings show contextual influences at the family and societal levels: family-of-origin social class moderates effects of maternal employment and childhood exposure to female employment within society can substitute for the influence of maternal employment on daughters and reinforce its influence on sons." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Household employment and the crisis in Europe (2019)

    Sánchez-Mira, Núria ; O'Reilly, Jacqueline;

    Zitatform

    Sánchez-Mira, Núria & Jacqueline O'Reilly (2019): Household employment and the crisis in Europe. In: Work, employment and society, Jg. 33, H. 3, S. 422-443. DOI:10.1177/0950017018809324

    Abstract

    "The 2008 crisis had a significant impact on household employment in some European countries. An analysis of the EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions generated a new cross-national typology of household employment structures and showed how these changed during the crisis and austerity period, capturing the experiences of high and low qualified households. Findings indicate that dual earning households are not always a consequence of gender equality but result from economic necessity or employment opportunities. The re-emergence of traditional male breadwinner households is often the result of female unemployment, especially for lower educated women. An increase in female single earners and workless households is evident in countries hit hardest by the employment crisis. The value of this cross-national typology, rooted in the interaction of educational effects and employment opportunities, is allowing comparison both within and between European countries, going beyond established typologies based on policy frameworks or gender cultures." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Husband's unemployment and wife's labor supply: the added worker effect across Europe (2018)

    Bredtmann, Julia; Otten, Sebastian; Rulff, Christian ;

    Zitatform

    Bredtmann, Julia, Sebastian Otten & Christian Rulff (2018): Husband's unemployment and wife's labor supply. The added worker effect across Europe. In: ILR review, Jg. 71, H. 5, S. 1201-1231. DOI:10.1177/0019793917739617

    Abstract

    "Dieser Artikel beschäftigt sich mit der Anpassung des Arbeitsangebots von Frauen in Reaktion auf den Jobverlust ihres Partners, dem sog. 'Added Worker Effect'. Während sich die bisherige Literatur überwiegend auf Studien für spezifische Länder konzentriert hat, nehmen wir bewusst eine international vergleichende Perspektive ein und untersuchen, inwiefern der Added Worker Effect über die verschiedenen Wohlfahrtsstaatssysteme in Europa variiert. Unsere empirischen Analysen basieren auf Längsschnittdaten der 'European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC)' für den Zeitraum 2004 bis 2011. Für unseren aus 28 europäischen Ländern bestehenden Datensatz finden wir Evidenz für das Vorliegen eines Added Worker Effects: Frauen, deren Partner im vergangenen Jahr arbeitslos wurde, haben eine höhere Wahrscheinlichkeit, in den Arbeitsmarkt einzutreten sowie den Umfang ihrer Arbeitszeit zu erhöhen, gegeben dass sie schon am Arbeitsmarkt partizipieren. Darüber hinaus finden wir jedoch eine hohe Variation in der Existenz und der Stärke des Added Worker Effects sowohl über den Verlauf des Konjunkturzyklus als auch über die verschiedenen Wohlfahrtsstaatssysteme in Europa." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Gender norms and income misreporting within households (2018)

    Roth, Anja; Slotwinski, Michaela;

    Zitatform

    Roth, Anja & Michaela Slotwinski (2018): Gender norms and income misreporting within households. (CESifo working paper 7298), München, 30 S.

    Abstract

    "We revisit the prominent finding that women's incomes are disproportionally often observed just below the income of their partner. So far, this bunching has been explained by couple formation or couples' labor market decisions. We propose an additional mechanism: income misreporting in surveys. Drawing on survey and administrative data, we show that income misreporting accounts for the discontinuity in the distribution of women's relative incomes just below the point where a woman outearns her partner. This misreporting is best explained by the role of gender norms in individuals' self-portrayals and self-perception." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Taxation and labor supply of married couples across countries: a macroeconomic analysis (2017)

    Bick, Alexander ; Fuchs-Schündeln, Nicola ;

    Zitatform

    Bick, Alexander & Nicola Fuchs-Schündeln (2017): Taxation and labor supply of married couples across countries. A macroeconomic analysis. (IZA discussion paper 10504), Bonn, 39 S.

    Abstract

    "We document contemporaneous differences in the aggregate labor supply of married couples across 17 European countries and the US. Based on a model of joint household decision making, we quantify the contribution of international differences in non-linear labor income taxes and consumption taxes to the international differences in hours worked in the data. Through the lens of the model, taxes, together with wages and the educational composition, account for a significant part of the small differences in married men's and the large differences in married women's hours worked in the data. Taking the full nonlinearities of labor income tax codes, including the tax treatment of married couples, into account is crucial for generating the low cross-country correlation between married men's and women's hours worked in the data, and for explaining the variation of married women's hours worked across European countries." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Motherhood postponement and wages in Europe (2017)

    Bratti, Massimiliano ; Meroni, Elena Claudia; Pronzato, Chiara;

    Zitatform

    Bratti, Massimiliano, Elena Claudia Meroni & Chiara Pronzato (2017): Motherhood postponement and wages in Europe. In: ifo DICE report, Jg. 15, H. 2, S. S, 31-37.

    Abstract

    Heutzutage ist es nicht ungewöhnlich, dass Frauen ihr erstes Kind erst mit 30 Jahren oder später bekommen. Auf der Grundlage von Daten des Europäischen Haushaltspanels untersuchen die Autoren die Auswirkungen einer späten Mutterschaft auf das Einkommen der Mütter im europäischen Vergleich. Dabei werden auch sozioökonomische, kulturelle und institutionelle Faktoren berücksichtigt. Im Ergebnis zeigt sich eine große Varianz bei den positiven Einkommenseffekten einer aufgeschobenen Mutterschaft. In einigen Ländern führt das Aufschieben der Mutterschaft um ein Jahr zu einem Lohnanstieg von 2,5 Prozent (Deutschland und Polen), während sich in anderen Ländern ein negativer Effekt ergibt. Einkommensgewinne durch eine spätere Mutterschaft sind größer in Ländern mit einer wenig ausgeprägten Familienpolitik und in Gesellschaften mit traditionellen Werten. (IAB)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Labor force participation of women in the EU - what role do family policies play? (2017)

    Gehringer, Agnieszka; Klasen, Stephan;

    Zitatform

    Gehringer, Agnieszka & Stephan Klasen (2017): Labor force participation of women in the EU - what role do family policies play? In: Labour, Jg. 31, H. 1, S. 15-42. DOI:10.1111/labr.12085

    Abstract

    "We empirically study the role of different family policies in affecting women's labor market behavior in the European Union. Women tend to assume more family duties than men and, consequently, often participate less in the labor market. Family policies aim to support families in general while a particular focus is on helping women to reconcile family duties with labor market participation. Their impact, however, is not clear, especially when it comes to different forms of labor market activity. We use a static and dynamic panel econometric framework examining the link between financial support for four types of family policies and labor force participation as well as (part-time and full-time) employment. The results suggest no stable significant impact of expenditures on family policies on overall labor force participation. However, higher spending on family allowance, cash benefits, and daycare benefits appears to promote part-time employment, whereas only spending on parental leave schemes is a significant positive determinant of women's full-time employment." (Author's abstract, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Work-family conflict and well-being across Europe: The role of gender context (2017)

    Hagqvist, Emma; Gadin, Katja Gillander; Nordenmark, Mikael;

    Zitatform

    Hagqvist, Emma, Katja Gillander Gadin & Mikael Nordenmark (2017): Work-family conflict and well-being across Europe. The role of gender context. In: Social indicators research, Jg. 132, H. 2, S. 785-797. DOI:10.1007/s11205-016-1301-x

    Abstract

    "This study analysed whether gender context is important to differences in the relationship between work - family conflict (WFC) and well-being across Europe. We hypothesised that in countries that support equality in work life and where norms support women's employment, the relationship between WFC and low well-being is weaker than in countries with less support for gender equality. Cohabiting men and women aged 18 - 65 years from 25 European countries were selected from the European Social Survey. A multilevel analysis was conducted to investigate the relationship between well-being and WFC, and two measurements were used to represent gender context: gender equality in work life and norms regarding women's employment. Contrary to the hypothesis, the results showed that the negative relationship was stronger in countries with high levels of gender equality in work life and support for women's employment than in countries with a relatively low level of gender equality in work life and support for traditional gender relations. The context in which gender is constructed may be important when studying the relationship between WFC and well-being. In addition, emphasis should be placed on policies that equalise both the labour market and the work performed at home." (Author's abstract, © Springer-Verlag) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    The role of basic values and education on women's work and family preferences in Europe (2017)

    Mateju, Petr; Smith, Michael L. ; Weidnerová, Simona; Anýžová, Petra;

    Zitatform

    Mateju, Petr, Michael L. Smith, Simona Weidnerová & Petra Anýžová (2017): The role of basic values and education on women's work and family preferences in Europe. In: The international journal of sociology and social policy, Jg. 37, H. 9/10, S. 494-514. DOI:10.1108/IJSSP-10-2016-0117

    Abstract

    "Purpose
    Consistent with dual-process models of behaviour, Miles (2015) has shown that Schwartz' basic values can provide a valuable framework for empirically analysing the role of values and cultural contexts in driving human behaviour. We contribute to this line of research by distinguishing individual values from macro-level values, as well as from other micro and macro conditions, in order to test whether individual values shape women's work-family orientations in ways predicted by Hakim's preference theory.
    Design/methodology/approach
    We make use of the second round of the European Social Survey (ESS) collected in 2004, where a battery of questions on human values and work-family preferences were posed, and apply a multilevel approach to take into account national cultural and economic conditions across 25 European countries.
    Findings
    In line with the dual-process model and preference theory, we show that internalized values, particularly conservatism, shape work-family orientations much more than national social and cultural conditions; in addition, the effect of women's education on work-value orientations is stronger in countries with more conservative national cultures, suggesting that education may help women overcome social barriers in the choice of their work-career preference.
    Originality/value
    While values may shape work-family orientations differently in non-European or less affluent cultures, these findings reveal the importance of bringing values back into the analysis of individual preferences and behaviours towards the labour market." (Author's abstract, © Emerald Group) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Differences in work - family conflict: which individual and national factors explain them? (2017)

    Ollo-López, Andrea; Goni-Legaz, Salomé;

    Zitatform

    Ollo-López, Andrea & Salomé Goni-Legaz (2017): Differences in work - family conflict. Which individual and national factors explain them? In: The international journal of human resource management, Jg. 28, H. 3, S. 499-525. DOI:10.1080/09585192.2015.1118141

    Abstract

    "This paper contributes to cross-cultural literature on work - family relationships by testing not only hypotheses about the impact of work and family demands and gender at individual level on work - family conflict (WFC), but also at country level. Concretely, several theories commonly used in the literature (role conflict, boundary management and social support theory) are used to analyzed how national culture dimensions affects WFC. Using information about employee residents in each of the countries interviewed in the Second European Quality of Life Survey and also GLOBE dimensions of national culture, the paper shows that the relationship between work and family demands and WFC is universal and equal phenomenon throughout Europe. In line with gender role theory, demanding and stressing work have stronger effects on women's WFC than on men's. While opposite to it, household hours also have stronger effect on women's WFC than on men's. Moreover, the paper shows that national culture affects how people perceive work - family relationships. In line with integration/segmentation hypotheses derived from boundary management theory, uncertainty avoidance decreases WFC. Moreover, in line with social support, human orientation decreases the level of WFC, especially for men. Eastern Europe and Mediterranean countries have higher levels of WFC, while Scandinavian countries are those that have lower levels of WFC." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Household production and consumption over the lifecycle: National Time Transfer Accounts in 14 European countries (2017)

    Vargha, Lili; Gál, Róbert Iván; Crosby-Nagy, Michelle O.;

    Zitatform

    Vargha, Lili, Róbert Iván Gál & Michelle O. Crosby-Nagy (2017): Household production and consumption over the lifecycle. National Time Transfer Accounts in 14 European countries. In: Demographic Research, Jg. 36, S. 905-944. DOI:10.4054/DemRes.2017.36.32

    Abstract

    "Background: While the importance of unpaid household labour is recognised in total economic output, little is known about the demographics of household production and consumption.
    Objective: Our goal is to give a comprehensive estimation on the value of household production and its consumption by age and gender and analyse nonmarket economic transfers in 14 European countries based on publicly available harmonised data.
    Methods: We introduce a novel imputation method of harmonised European time use (HETUS) data to the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) in order to assign time spent on home production to consumers in households and estimate time transfers. Moreover, monetary values are attributed to household production activities using data on earnings from the Structure of Earnings Survey (SES).
    Results: We show that the nonmarket economic life cycle of men differs from that of women. The gender gap in household production is not evenly distributed over the life cycle. Women of working age contribute the most in net terms, while the main beneficiaries of household goods and services are children and to a lesser extent adult men. These patterns are similar across countries, with variations in the gender- and age-specific levels of home production and consumption.
    Conclusions: In Europe, in the national economy, intergenerational flows are important in sustaining both childhood and old age. In contrast, in the household economy, intergenerational transfers flow mostly towards children.
    Contribution: We add a new focus to the research on household production: While keeping the gender aspect, we demonstrate the importance of the life cycle component in household production." (Author's abstract, © Max-Planck-Institut für demographische Forschung) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Which ideas, whose norms? Comparing the relative influence of international organizations on paid maternity and parental leave policies in liberal welfare states (2017)

    White, Linda A.;

    Zitatform

    White, Linda A. (2017): Which ideas, whose norms? Comparing the relative influence of international organizations on paid maternity and parental leave policies in liberal welfare states. In: Social Politics, Jg. 24, H. 1, S. 55-80. DOI:10.1093/sp/jxw010

    Abstract

    "This article examines the adoption of paid maternity and parental leave policies in the liberal welfare states of Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom and investigates the domestic and international sources of policy ideas. Through comparative analysis using mainly qualitative techniques of analysis of primary and secondary sources and elite interviews, the article examines the decision-making processes in each of these jurisdictions. It finds the relative influence of international organizations to be rather limited in comparison to domestic sources of influence, including the election of leftist governments under sympathetic party leaders and in the context of human capital concerns." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Fifty years of change updated: cross-national gender convergence in housework (2016)

    Altintas, Evrim; Sullivan, Oriel;

    Zitatform

    Altintas, Evrim & Oriel Sullivan (2016): Fifty years of change updated. Cross-national gender convergence in housework. In: Demographic Research, Jg. 35, S. 455-470. DOI:10.4054/DemRes.2016.35.16

    Abstract

    "Background: Gendered trends in housework provide an important insight into changing gender inequality. In particular, they shed light on the debate over the stalling of the 'gender revolution'. Additionally, the gender division of housework is significantly related to couple well-being; disagreements over housework are among the major sources of marital conflict.
    Objective: The objective is to bring the evidence on gendered trends in time spent on core housework up to date, and to investigate cross-national variation in those trends.
    Methods: Using 66 time use surveys from 19 countries, we apply a random-intercept, random-slope model to investigate half a century of change in gender differences in housework (1961-2011).
    Results: There is a general movement in the direction of greater gender equality, but with significant country differences in both the level and the pace of convergence. Specifically, there was a slowing of gender convergence from the late 1980s in those countries where men and women's time in housework was already more equal, with steeper gender convergence continuing in those countries where the gender division of housework was less equal.
    Conclusions: Our findings support the view that despite short-term stalls, slow-downs, and even reverses, as well as important differences in national policy contexts, the overall cross-national picture shows a continuing trend towards greater gender equality in the performance of housework.
    Contribution: We update cross-national time use evidence on the gender division of housework to the end of the first decade of the 21st Century. In a multilevel framework, we show how the gender gap varies across time and between countries, net of other demographic variables." (Author's abstract, © Max-Planck-Institut für demographische Forschung) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Gender equality in the division of work: how to assess European leave policies regarding their compliance with an ideal leave model (2016)

    Dearing, Helene;

    Zitatform

    Dearing, Helene (2016): Gender equality in the division of work. How to assess European leave policies regarding their compliance with an ideal leave model. In: Journal of European social policy, Jg. 26, H. 3, S. 234-247. DOI:10.1177/0958928716642951

    Abstract

    "This article assesses 27 European parental leave policies regarding their compliance with an ideal leave policy model that best supports gender equality in the division of labour. Given the difficulties in defining such an ideal leave model, the article makes this assessment in two stages. Stage 1 exploits the most salient results of the empirical literature in order to define an ideal leave model that foresees the provision of 14?months of well-paid leave, where half of the leave is reserved for fathers. An 'Equal Gender Division of Labour' indicator is developed to assess the performance of different countries regarding their compliance with the ideal leave model. Stage 2 tests the sensitivity of the results with regard to three different scenarios that account for alternative assumptions about (1) the actual duration of leave that is supposed to be 'ideal', (2) the significance of providing leave only in combination with payments and (3) the importance of reserving some of the provided leave for fathers." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    What is your couple type? Gender ideology, housework sharing, and babies (2015)

    Aassve, Arnstein; Mendola, Daria ; Fuochi, Giulia; Mencarini, Letizia ;

    Zitatform

    Aassve, Arnstein, Giulia Fuochi, Letizia Mencarini & Daria Mendola (2015): What is your couple type? Gender ideology, housework sharing, and babies. In: Demographic Research, Jg. 32, S. 835-858. DOI:10.4054/DemRes.2015.32.30

    Abstract

    "Background: It is increasingly acknowledged that not only gender equality but also gender ideology plays a role in explaining fertility in advanced societies. In a micro perspective, the potential mismatch between gender equality (i.e., the actual sharing taking place in a couple) and gender ideology (i.e., attitudes and beliefs regarding gender roles) may drive childbearing decisions.
    Objective: This paper assesses the impact of consistency between gender equality in attitudes and equality in the division of household labour on the likelihood of having another child, for different parities.
    Methods: Relying on two-wave panel data of the Bulgarian, Czech, French, Hungarian, and Lithuanian Generations and Gender Surveys, we build a couple typology defined by gender attitudes and housework-sharing. The typology identifies four types of couple: 1) gender-unequal attitudes and gender-unequal housework-sharing; 2) gender-equal attitudes and gender-unequal housework-sharing; 3) gender-unequal attitudes and gender-equal housework-sharing; 4) gender-equal attitudes and gender-equal housework-sharing. The couple types enter into a logistic regression model on childbirth.
    Results: The impact of the typology varies with parity and gender: taking as reference category the case of gender-equal attitudes and gender-equal division of housework, the effect of all the other couple types on a new childbirth is strong and negative for the second child and female respondents.
    Conclusions: The consistency between gender ideology and actual partners' housework-sharing is only favourable for childbearing as long as there is gender equality in both the dimensions." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Women's working hours: the interplay between gender role attitudes, motherhood, and public childcare support in 23 European countries (2015)

    Andringa, Wouter; Nieuwenhuis, Rense ; Gerven, Minna van;

    Zitatform

    Andringa, Wouter, Rense Nieuwenhuis & Minna van Gerven (2015): Women's working hours. The interplay between gender role attitudes, motherhood, and public childcare support in 23 European countries. In: The international journal of sociology and social policy, Jg. 35, H. 9/10, S. 582-599. DOI:10.1108/IJSSP-10-2014-0073

    Abstract

    "The purpose of this paper is to show how the interplay between individual women's gender role attitudes, having young children at home, as well as the country-context characterized by gender egalitarianism and public childcare support, relates to women's working hours in 23 European countries.
    This study presents results of multilevel regression analyses of data from the European Social Survey (Round 2). These micro-level data on 23 European countries were combined with country-level measures on gender traditionalism and childcare expenditure.
    The authors found that the negative association between having young children at home and women's working hours is stronger for women with traditional gender role attitudes compared to women with egalitarian attitudes. The gap in working hours between women with and without young children at home was smaller in countries in which the population holds egalitarian gender role attitudes and in countries with extensive public childcare support. Furthermore, it was found that the gap in employment hours between mothers with traditional or egalitarian attitudes was largest in countries with limited public childcare support.
    Policy makers should take note that women's employment decisions are not dependent on human capital and household-composition factors alone, but that gender role attitudes matter as well. The authors could not find evidence of the inequality in employment between women with different gender role attitudes being exacerbated in association with childcare support.
    The originality of this study lies in the combined (rather than separate) analysis of how countries' social policies (childcare services) and countries' attitudes (gender traditionalism) interact with individual gender role attitudes to shape cross-national variation in women's working hours." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    How do changes in gender role attitudes towards female employment influence fertility?: A macro-level analysis (2015)

    Arpino, Bruno ; Pessin, Léa; Esping-Andersen, Gøsta;

    Zitatform

    Arpino, Bruno, Gøsta Esping-Andersen & Léa Pessin (2015): How do changes in gender role attitudes towards female employment influence fertility? A macro-level analysis. In: European Sociological Review, Jg. 31, H. 3, S. 370-382. DOI:10.1093/esr/jcv002

    Abstract

    "This study explores whether the diffusion of gender-equitable attitudes towards female employment is associated with fertility. We argue that any positive effect on fertility requires not only high levels of gender-equitable attitudes overall, but also attitude convergence between men and women. We analyse 27 countries using data from the World Values Surveys and European Values Studies. We find support for a U-shaped relationship between changes in gender role attitudes and fertility: an initial drop in fertility is observed as countries move from a traditional to a more gender-symmetric model. Beyond a certain threshold, additional increases in gender egalitarianism become positively associated with fertility. This curvilinear relationship is moderated by the difference in attitudes between men and women: when there is more agreement, changes are more rapid and the effect of gender egalitarian attitudes on fertility strengthens." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Institutionelle Determinanten einer partnerschaftlichen Aufteilung von Erwerbsarbeit in Europa und den USA (2015)

    Hipp, Lena ; Leuze, Kathrin ;

    Zitatform

    Hipp, Lena & Kathrin Leuze (2015): Institutionelle Determinanten einer partnerschaftlichen Aufteilung von Erwerbsarbeit in Europa und den USA. In: Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, Jg. 67, H. 4, S. 659-684. DOI:10.1007/s11577-015-0343-4

    Abstract

    "Warum teilen Paare in manchen Ländern bezahlte Arbeit egalitärer auf als in anderen? Mittels einer Mehrebenenanalyse von Daten der Europäischen Arbeitskräfteerhebung und des amerikanischen Current Population Surveys, denen wir Länderinformationen zugespielt haben, untersuchen wir in diesem Artikel, inwiefern Steuer- und Sozialgesetzgebung, nationale Arbeitsmarktcharakteristika und Geschlechternormen Arbeitszeitunterschiede innerhalb von heterosexuellen Paaren beeinflussen. Wir können zeigen, dass die Aufteilung von Erwerbsarbeit zwischen Partnern in den Ländern geringer ausfällt, in denen Einkommen individuell besteuert werden, Kinderbetreuung gut ausgebaut ist, Männer und Frauen ähnliche Stundenlöhne für gleiche Arbeit bekommen und in denen egalitäre Geschlechternormen vorherrschen. Mit diesen Erkenntnissen liefert der Artikel einen wichtigen Beitrag zur aktuellen politischen Diskussion um 'Partnerschaftlichkeit' und stärkt unser Verständnis für fortbestehende Geschlechterungleichheiten auf dem Arbeitsmarkt." (Autorenreferat, © Springer-Verlag)

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    Husband's unemployment and wife's labor supply: the added worker effect across Europe (2014)

    Bredtmann, Julia; Otten, Sebastian; Rulff, Christian ;

    Zitatform

    Bredtmann, Julia, Sebastian Otten & Christian Rulff (2014): Husband's unemployment and wife's labor supply. The added worker effect across Europe. (Ruhr economic papers 484), Essen, 49 S.

    Abstract

    "Dieser Artikel beschäftigt sich mit der Anpassung des Arbeitsangebots von Frauen in Reaktion auf den Jobverlust ihres Partners, dem sog. 'Added Worker Effect'. Während sich die bisherige Literatur überwiegend auf Studien für spezifische Länder konzentriert hat, nehmen wir bewusst eine international vergleichende Perspektive ein und untersuchen, inwiefern der Added Worker Effect über die verschiedenen Wohlfahrtsstaatssysteme in Europa variiert. Unsere empirischen Analysen basieren auf Längsschnittdaten der 'European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC)' für den Zeitraum 2004 bis 2011. Für unseren aus 28 europäischen Ländern bestehenden Datensatz finden wir Evidenz für das Vorliegen eines Added Worker Effects: Frauen, deren Partner im vergangenen Jahr arbeitslos wurde, haben eine höhere Wahrscheinlichkeit, in den Arbeitsmarkt einzutreten sowie den Umfang ihrer Arbeitszeit zu erhöhen, gegeben dass sie schon am Arbeitsmarkt partizipieren. Darüber hinaus finden wir jedoch eine hohe Variation in der Existenz und der Stärke des Added Worker Effects sowohl über den Verlauf des Konjunkturzyklus als auch über die verschiedenen Wohlfahrtsstaatssysteme in Europa." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Husband's unemployment and wife's labor supply: the added worker effect across Europe (2014)

    Bredtmann, Julia; Otten, Sebastian; Rulff, Christian ;

    Zitatform

    Bredtmann, Julia, Sebastian Otten & Christian Rulff (2014): Husband's unemployment and wife's labor supply. The added worker effect across Europe. (University Aarhus. Economics working paper 2014-13), Aarhus, 47 S.

    Abstract

    "Dieser Artikel beschäftigt sich mit der Anpassung des Arbeitsangebots von Frauen in Reaktion auf den Jobverlust ihres Partners, dem sog. 'Added Worker Effect'. Während sich die bisherige Literatur überwiegend auf Studien für spezifische Länder konzentriert hat, nehmen wir bewusst eine international vergleichende Perspektive ein und untersuchen, inwiefern der Added Worker Effect über die verschiedenen Wohlfahrtsstaatssysteme in Europa variiert. Unsere empirischen Analysen basieren auf Längsschnittdaten der 'European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC)' für den Zeitraum 2004 bis 2011. Für unseren aus 28 europäischen Ländern bestehenden Datensatz finden wir Evidenz für das Vorliegen eines Added Worker Effects: Frauen, deren Partner im vergangenen Jahr arbeitslos wurde, haben eine höhere Wahrscheinlichkeit, in den Arbeitsmarkt einzutreten sowie den Umfang ihrer Arbeitszeit zu erhöhen, gegeben dass sie schon am Arbeitsmarkt partizipieren. Darüber hinaus finden wir jedoch eine hohe Variation in der Existenz und der Stärke des Added Worker Effects sowohl über den Verlauf des Konjunkturzyklus als auch über die verschiedenen Wohlfahrtsstaatssysteme in Europa." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    After the male breadwinner model?: childcare services and the division of labor in European countries (2014)

    Ciccia, Rossella ; Bleijenbergh, Inge;

    Zitatform

    Ciccia, Rossella & Inge Bleijenbergh (2014): After the male breadwinner model? Childcare services and the division of labor in European countries. In: Social Politics, Jg. 21, H. 1, S. 50-79. DOI:10.1093/sp/jxu002

    Abstract

    "Fundamental reforms in childcare services appear to have eroded traditional support to the male breadwinner model across European states. There has been a strong debate about the direction of these changes, and the ways in which childcare services can alter the division of labor and promote gender equality. This paper deals with these issues by using fuzzy set ideal-type analysis to assess the conformity of childcare service provisions in European economies to Fraser's four ideal typical models: male breadwinner, caregiver parity, universal breadwinner, and universal caregiver. We find that there is resilience of traditional gender roles in the majority of European countries, while there are different variants of the universal breadwinner shaping different forms of childcare policies. The more equalitarian universal caregiver model maintains its utopian character." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Patterns of family life courses in Europe - between standardisation and diversity: a cross-national comparison of family trajectories and life course norms in European countries (2014)

    Hofäcker, Dirk; Chaloupková, Jana;

    Zitatform

    Hofäcker, Dirk & Jana Chaloupková (2014): Patterns of family life courses in Europe - between standardisation and diversity. A cross-national comparison of family trajectories and life course norms in European countries. In: Comparative Population Studies, Jg. 39, H. 3, S. 559-586. DOI:10.12765/CPoS-2014-11en

    Abstract

    "Throughout recent decades, a gradual shift away from an early contracted and simple life course pattern which dominated in the 1950s and 1960s to late protracted and more complex patterns could be observed within European countries. Yet, despite multiple cross-national similarities in the changes of individual life course patterns, there exist considerable differences in the form and frequency of these changes. We argue that one possible way of better understanding these variations is to examine the connection between family formation choices and value orientations. Using data from the European Social Survey 2006 we empirically investigate to what extent the family trajectories have changed across generations and how these practiced family trajectories correspond to cross-cohort changes in socially established norms about family transitions. Our results corroborate the assumption of an increasing restandardisation of family lives: Even though family trajectories have become more turbulent involving more stages and stage changes for the younger generation, 'deviations' from traditional family patterns (such as unmarried cohabitation) are turning into majority behaviour, i.e. into a 'new standard'. Contrasting these trends with developments in family-related norms reveals that the liberalisation in norms appears to precede such changes in actual demographic behaviour, even though European countries differ in the degree and pace to which such normative and behavioural changes have yet taken place." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Varying association between education and second births in Europe: comparative analysis based on the EU-SILC data (2014)

    Klesment, Martin ; Puur, Allan ; Rahnu, Leen ; Sakkeus, Luule;

    Zitatform

    Klesment, Martin, Allan Puur, Leen Rahnu & Luule Sakkeus (2014): Varying association between education and second births in Europe. Comparative analysis based on the EU-SILC data. In: Demographic Research, Jg. 31, S. 813-860. DOI:10.4054/DemRes.2014.31.27

    Abstract

    "Background: Previous research has shown considerable variation in the relationship between women's educational attainment and second births in contemporary Europe. A negative association is found in some countries, while a positive or non-negative relationship is reported in others. Existing studies come mainly from single-country perspectives, which renders the results not strictly comparable.
    Objective: We investigate the association between women's and their partners' educational attainment and transition to second births comparatively in regions and sub-regions of Europe.
    Methods: The data come from the 2005 and 2011 waves of the EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC). We estimate separate discrete-time event history models for regions and sub-regions and multilevel models for all EU-SILC countries.
    Results: Northern Europe exhibits a positive association between women's and their partners' education and second childbearing. Western Europe features a positive relationship among partners but demonstrates a U-shaped pattern among women. This pattern occurs due to German-speaking countries where women's educational attainment appears inversely related to second births. A negative relationship between women's education and second childbearing also prevails in Eastern Europe; in some sub-regions it extends to male partners. Except for in Eastern Europe, the time-squeeze adds to the positive effect of women's high education. In Northern Europe it enables highly educated women to wholly catch up with their counterparts with medium and low education as regards the proportion having second births. In Southern Europe, by contrast, the educational gradient turns negative following the consideration of the time-squeeze effect.
    Conclusions: We conclude that the relationship between educational attainment and second births varies not only by individual country but also by larger geographical area in Europe. Although smaller in scale than among women, the variation also extends to male partners." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Disagreements among cohabiting and married couples in 22 European countries (2014)

    Lippe, Tanja van der; Voorpostel, Marieke; Hewitt, Belinda;

    Zitatform

    Lippe, Tanja van der, Marieke Voorpostel & Belinda Hewitt (2014): Disagreements among cohabiting and married couples in 22 European countries. In: Demographic Research, Jg. 31, S. 247-274. DOI:10.4054/DemRes.2014.31.10

    Abstract

    "Background: Cross-national research suggests that married people have higher levels of well-being than cohabiting people. However, relationship quality has both positive and negative dimensions. Researchers have paid little attention to disagreements within cohabiting and married couples.
    Objective: This study aims to improve our understanding of the meaning of cohabitation by examining disagreements within marital and cohabiting relationships. We examine variations in couples' disagreements about housework, paid work and money by country and gender.
    Methods: The data come from the 2004 European Social Survey. We selected respondents living in a heterosexual couple relationship and aged between 18 and 45. In total, the study makes use of data from 22 European countries and 9,657 people. Given that our dependent variable was dichotomous, we estimated multilevel logit models, with (1) disagree and (0) never disagree.
    Results: We find that cohabitors had more disagreements about housework, the same disagreements about money, but fewer disagreements about paid work than did married people. These findings could not be explained by socio-economic or demographic measures, nor did we find gender or cross-country differences in the association between union status and conflict.
    Conclusions: Cohabiting couples have more disagreements about housework but fewer disagreements about paid work than married people. There are no gender or cross-country differences in these associations. The results provide further evidence that the meaning of cohabitation differs from that of marriage, and that this difference remains consistent across nations." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Third European quality of life survey: quality of life in Europe: Impacts of the crisis (2012)

    Anderson, Robert; Dubois, Hans; Leončikas, Tadas; Sandor, Eszter;

    Zitatform

    Anderson, Robert, Hans Dubois, Tadas Leončikas & Eszter Sandor (2012): Third European quality of life survey. Quality of life in Europe: Impacts of the crisis. Dublin, 163 S. DOI:10.2806/42471

    Abstract

    "What determines life satisfaction and happiness? How do we value our social situation and immediate surroundings? How has this changed with the economic crisis? For the third wave of the European Quality of Life survey, 35,500 Europeans in all EU Member States were interviewed, in an effort to gain insights to these questions. This overview report presents findings and trends and shows that the impacts of the recession are indeed noticeable and measurable in some areas, while in others there are more long-term developments to be observed. While overall life satisfaction levels have not changed much, optimism about the future and trust in institutions have declined markedly in those countries most affected by the downturn. And groups that were already vulnerable - the long-term unemployed, older people in central and eastern Europe and single parents - report the highest levels of material deprivation and dissatisfaction with their life situation." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Policy and practice: the relationship between family policy regime and women's labour market participation in Europe (2012)

    Boje, Thomas P.; Ejrnæs, Anders;

    Zitatform

    Boje, Thomas P. & Anders Ejrnæs (2012): Policy and practice: the relationship between family policy regime and women's labour market participation in Europe. In: The international journal of sociology and social policy, Jg. 32, H. 9/10, S. 589-605. DOI:10.1108/01443331211257670

    Abstract

    "Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to develop a typology of different family policy systems in Europe and evaluate their impact on the employment strategy of mothers with care responsibilities for dependent children.
    Design/methodology/approach - The paper outlines a typology of family policy regimes in Europe - covering the 26 countries. A typology based on a cluster analysis of macro indicators of family policy - coverage of childcare, effective parental leave and spending on family policies. The cluster analysis is based on data from OECD family data base. Then follows an analysis of the impact of the different family policy regimes on mothers' employment strategies when they return into gainful employment, based on data from the European Social Survey, 2008.
    Findings - The authors have identified four different family policy models: extensive family policy, long parental leave, family care, and cash for care. For each of the models, different strategies are found for take up of employment for mothers with dependent children.
    Originality/value - The paper includes 26 European countries, thereby covering the East and Central Europe, which is not the case in most welfare typologies. Furthermore, the authors distinguish clearly in the analyses between the institutional dimension and the outcome - mothers' employment strategies." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Work-family conflict in comparative perspective: the role of social policies (2012)

    Stier, Haya ; Lewin-Epstein, Noah; Braun, Michael;

    Zitatform

    Stier, Haya, Noah Lewin-Epstein & Michael Braun (2012): Work-family conflict in comparative perspective. The role of social policies. In: Research in Social Stratification and Mobility, Jg. 30, H. 3, S. 265-279. DOI:10.1016/j.rssm.2012.02.001

    Abstract

    "This study focuses on the role of social policies in mitigating work-family incompatibilities in 27 countries. We ask whether work-family conflict is reduced in countries that provide family-friendly policies and flexible employment arrangements, and whether women and men are similarly affected by such policies. The study, based on the ISSP 2002, demonstrates considerable variation among countries in the perceived work-family conflict. In all but two countries, women report higher levels of conflict than men. At the individual level, working hours, the presence of children and work characteristics affect the perception of conflict. At the macro level, childcare availability and to a certain extent maternity leave reduce women's and men's sense of conflict. Additionally, the availability of childcare facilities alleviates the adverse effect of children on work-family balance for mothers while flexible job arrangements intensify this effect." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    What adult worker model?: a critical look at recent social policy reform in Europe from a gender and family perspective (2011)

    Daly, Mary ;

    Zitatform

    Daly, Mary (2011): What adult worker model? A critical look at recent social policy reform in Europe from a gender and family perspective. In: Social Politics, Jg. 18, H. 1, S. 1-23. DOI:10.1093/sp/jxr002

    Abstract

    "Analyses regularly feature claims that European welfare states are in the process of creating an adult worker model. The theoretical and empirical basis of this argument is examined here by looking first at the conceptual foundations of the adult worker model formulation and then at the extent to which social policy reform in western Europe fits with the argument. It is suggested that the adult worker formulation is under-specified. A framework incorporating four dimensions - the treatment of individuals vis-a -vis their family role and status for the purposes of social rights, the treatment of care, the treatment of the family as a social institution, and the extent to which gender inequality is problematized - is developed and then applied. The empirical analysis reveals a strong move towards individualization as social policy promotes and valorizes individual agency and self-sufficiency and shifts some childcare from the family. Yet evidence is also found of continued (albeit changed) familism. Rather than an unequivocal move to an individualized worker model then, a dual earner gender-specialized, family arrangement is being promoted. The latter is the middle way between the old dependencies and the new 'independence.' This makes for complexity and even ambiguity in policy, a manifestation of which is that reform within countries involves concurrent moves in several directions." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Does informal eldercare impede women's employment?: the case of European welfare states (2011)

    Kotsadam, Andreas;

    Zitatform

    Kotsadam, Andreas (2011): Does informal eldercare impede women's employment? The case of European welfare states. In: Feminist economics, Jg. 17, H. 2, S. 121-144. DOI:10.1080/13545701.2010.543384

    Abstract

    "European states vary in eldercare policies and in gendered norms of family care, and this study uses these variations to gain insight into the importance of macrolevel factors for the work - care relationship. Using advanced panel data methods on European Community Household Panel (ECHP) data for 1994-2001, this study finds women's employment to be negatively associated with informal caregiving to the elderly across the European Union. For the countries included in the study, the effects of informal caregiving seem to be more negative in Southern Europe, less negative in Nordic countries, and in between these extremes in Central Europe. This study explains that since eldercare is a choice in countries with more formal care and less pronounced gendered care norms, the weaker impact of eldercare on women's employment in these countries has to do with the lesser degree of coercion in the caring decision." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Doing better for families (2011)

    Thévenon, Oliver; Gordine, Tatiana; Fron, Pauline; Ali, Nabil; Salvi Del Pero, Angelica; Bilotta, Marta; Huerta, Maria; Richardson, Dominic; Chapple, Simon; Zapata, Juliana; Bytchkova, Alexandra; Richardson, Linda;

    Abstract

    "Der Bericht bietet eine Zusammenschau verschiedenster familienpolitischer Aspekte im Vergleich der 34 OECD-Mitgliedsländer. Das Spektrum reicht von veränderten Familienstrukturen, über Geburtentrends und Beschäftigungsanreizen für Eltern bis hin zu unterschiedlichen Ansätzen der Familienförderung in OECD-Ländern.
    Alle OECD-Länder sind bestrebt, Eltern mehr Wahlmöglichkeiten bei ihren Entscheidungen in Bezug auf Familie und Beruf zu bieten. In dieser Publikation werden die verschiedenen Methoden erörtert, die in der staatlichen Familienförderung eingesetzt werden. Ziel ist dabei die Beantwortung einer Reihe von Fragen, wie z.B.: Steigen die Ausgaben für Familienleistungen und inwieweit variieren sie je nach Alter des Kindes? Hatte die Krise Auswirkungen auf die staatlichen Hilfen für Familien? Wie kann Menschen am besten dabei geholfen werden, ihre Vorstellungen in Bezug auf die Zahl ihrer Kinder zu realisieren? Welche Effekte haben Elternurlaubsregelungen auf die Erwerbsbeteiligung der Frauen und das Wohlergehen der Kinder? Sind die Kinderbetreuungskosten ein Hindernis für die Erwerbstätigkeit der Eltern, und können flexible Arbeitszeitregelungen hier Abhilfe schaffen? Was ist für Mütter der beste Zeitpunkt, um nach der Geburt ihres Kindes wieder ins Erwerbsleben zurückzukehren? Und welche Maßnahmen sind am besten geeignet, die Armut unter Alleinerziehenden zu mindern?" (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Gender cultures and the division of labour in contemporary Europe: a cross-national perspective (2010)

    Aboim, Sofia;

    Zitatform

    Aboim, Sofia (2010): Gender cultures and the division of labour in contemporary Europe. A cross-national perspective. In: The sociological review, Jg. 58, H. 2, S. 171-196. DOI:10.1111/j.1467-954X.2010.01899.x

    Abstract

    "Drawing on the vast literature concerned with the cultural aspects of gender, this article explores the ways in which individuals living in different national contexts value the ideal of a dual earner/dual carer couple at the expense of the male breadwinner model. Via a comparison of fifteen European countries included in the Family and Gender Roles module of the 2002 International Social Survey Programme (ISSP), three attitudinal patterns were identified: the unequal sharing that portrays a male breadwinner norm, the familistic unequal that also endorses a gender-segregated arrangement though with a greater wish for men's involvement in housework and childcare, and the dual earner/dual carer model, which, despite covering nearly 40 per cent of respondents, is very unequally distributed across countries. It is proposed that societal gender cultures are of major importance to an understanding of cross-national variations in attitudes and their relationship with the real forms of gender division of labour. The connection between couples' attitudes and practices is thus examined in order to assess the extent to which support for the dual earner/dual carer model encourages couples to engage in more equal sharing of paid and unpaid work. Findings reveal the importance of the normative dimension insofar as the impact of attitudes on practices seems to depend on the historical pathways of gender cultures and the ways in which they underpin welfare policies and female employment." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Rethinking work-family conflict: dual-earner policies, role conflict and role expansion in Western Europe (2010)

    Grönlund, Anne ; Öun, Ida ;

    Zitatform

    Grönlund, Anne & Ida Öun (2010): Rethinking work-family conflict. Dual-earner policies, role conflict and role expansion in Western Europe. In: Journal of European social policy, Jg. 20, H. 3, S. 179-195. DOI:10.1177/0958928710364431

    Abstract

    "The aim of this article is to deepen the understanding of work -- family conflict and the impact of social policies by integrating the theoretical perspectives of role conflict and role expansion. First, we present a theoretical model identifying different mechanisms through which policy may affect both role conflict and role expansion, with a particular focus on dual-earner policies. Second, we examine some of its implications, using data from the European Social Survey comprising 10,950 employees in 15 countries. In contrast to traditional theories presenting conflict and expansion as mutually exclusive, we find that work -- family conflict and experiences of role expansion, measured with indicators of life satisfaction and psychological well being, may go hand in hand. The results also indicate that such a balance is more common in countries with dual-earner policies than in other countries. Women committing as strongly to work as men experience more work -- family conflict, but also high levels of well being and satisfaction. The findings largely support our theoretical arguments and imply that future research should examine the conflict-expansion nexus rather than focussing on either of the two. In this context, both gender and policy need to be considered." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Begrenzte Wahl - Gelegenheitsstrukturen und Erwerbsmuster in Paarhaushalten im europäischen Vergleich (2010)

    Steiber, Nadia ; Haas, Barbara ;

    Zitatform

    Steiber, Nadia & Barbara Haas (2010): Begrenzte Wahl - Gelegenheitsstrukturen und Erwerbsmuster in Paarhaushalten im europäischen Vergleich. In: Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, Jg. 62., H. 2, S. 247-276. DOI:10.1007/s11577-010-0103-4

    Abstract

    "Dieser Artikel untersucht Erwerbsmodelle in Paarhaushalten - insbesondere deren Variabilität je nach Präsenz und Alter von Kindern. Ziel der vergleichenden Analyse von 10 europäischen Ländern auf Basis des European Social Survey (2004/05 und 2006/07) ist die Erklärung der ausgeprägten Länderunterschiede sowohl im Hinblick auf empirisch bedeutsame Erwerbsmuster, vor allem jedoch hinsichtlich deren Veränderung über den Lebenszyklus von Familien. Als Erklärungsfaktoren werden sowohl wohlfahrtsstaatliche Regelungen (Familien- und Steuerpolitiken) und sozioökonomische Bedingungen (Lohnniveau, Arbeitslosigkeit, Verfügbarkeit von Teilzeitarbeit) als auch kulturelle Faktoren (gesellschaftlich dominante Werthaltungen in Bezug auf Geschlechterrollen und Kleinkindbetreuung) untersucht. Der Artikel diskutiert das Verhältnis dieser strukturellen und kulturellen Faktoren zur Praxis gelebter Erwerbsmuster in Paarhaushalten und kommt dabei zu dem Schluss, dass die Erklärung geschlechtsspezifischer Erwerbsmuster letztlich von Land zu Land unterschiedlich ausfallen muss, um der Komplexität ihrer Genesis gerecht zu werden." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Pension reforms, working patterns and gender pension gaps in Europe (2009)

    Frericks, Patricia ; Knijn, Trudie; Maier, Robert;

    Zitatform

    Frericks, Patricia, Trudie Knijn & Robert Maier (2009): Pension reforms, working patterns and gender pension gaps in Europe. In: Gender, Work and Organization, Jg. 16, H. 6, S. 710-730. DOI:10.1111/j.1468-0432.2009.00457.x

    Abstract

    "European pension reforms are dominated by the principles of privatization and individualization. Privatizing and individualizing pension entitlements call for a redefinition of the responsibilities of states and individuals. Moreover, statutorily introducing individualization calls for equal opportunities to be guaranteed. However, the implementation of equal opportunities is a long way off because pension-determining factors are still subject to gender distinctions, among other things. Gender distinction is inherent in life courses as well as in welfare arrangements. Welfare arrangements determine the legitimate reasons for gaining pension rights, how the measures of different entitlements are interrelated and which factors hamper a person's ability to fulfil the pension norm. This article analyses the link between welfare arrangements and women's life courses for a better understanding of the gendered norms of pension entitlements by focusing on gendered wages and life expectancies, gendered working patterns, and the connection between care and pensions." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Gut gemeint ist noch lange nicht getan: Eine international vergleichende Analyse zur partnerschaftlichen Arbeitsteilung im Haushalt (2007)

    Hofäcker, Dirk;

    Zitatform

    Hofäcker, Dirk (2007): Gut gemeint ist noch lange nicht getan: Eine international vergleichende Analyse zur partnerschaftlichen Arbeitsteilung im Haushalt. In: Informationsdienst Soziale Indikatoren H. 37, S. 12-15.

    Abstract

    "In der Entwicklung familialer Erwerbsmuster hat sich in Europa in den letzten Jahrzehnten ein tief greifender Wandel vollzogen. Bis Mitte des vergangenen Jahrhunderts existierte in vielen Familien mit Kindern noch eine eindeutige Arbeitsteilung zwischen einem erwerbstätigen, männlichen 'Familienernährer' und einer auf Kindererziehung und Hausarbeit spezialisierten Ehefrau. International vergleichende Daten belegen jedoch in allen modernen Gesellschaften für die jüngere Vergangenheit eine Annäherung der Erwerbsquoten von Männern und Frauen (Hofäcker 2006a). Sozialwissenschaftliche Diagnosen sehen zudem das Verhältnis zwischen den Geschlechtern 'im Umbruch' (Leitner et al. 2004) und das 'klassische Ernährermodell' in einem Zustand zunehmender Auflösung in Richtung einer Erwerbstätigkeit beider Ehepartner (Lewis 2004). Vor dem Hintergrund dieser Annäherung von Männern und Frauen im Erwerbsleben wird auch eine Angleichung in der familialen Arbeitsteilung zwischen den Geschlechtern gefordert: 'Neue Väter' sollen mehr Verantwortung für die Erziehung der Kinder übernehmen und sich bei der Erledigung alltäglicher Haushaltsarbeiten umfassender engagieren. Mehrere europäische Länder unterstützen diese innerfamiliale Angleichung zudem durch spezielle familienpolitische Programme. Lässt sich jedoch de facto ein Trend zu solchen, an einer gleichmäßigen Aufteilung von Haus- und Erwerbsarbeit orientierten 'neuen Vätern' erkennen? Der vorliegende Beitrag geht auf Basis der 1988, 1994 und 2002 erhobenen Daten des ISSP-Moduls 'Family and Changing Gender Roles' dieser Frage in insgesamt 18 Ländern Europas nach. Er rekonstruiert Einstellungsmuster von Vätern als notwendige Grundbedingung eines Verhaltenswandels und stellt diese anschließend der tatsächlichen Beteiligung von Vätern an Familien- und Haushaltsarbeit gegenüber. Der systematische Vergleich nationaler Kontextbedingungen ermöglicht es dabei zu rekonstruieren, inwiefern es nationaler Familien- und Arbeitsmarktpolitik gelungen ist, Männer verstärkt zur Übernahme familialer Verantwortung zu bewegen." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Conceptualizing breadwinning work (2007)

    Warren, Tracey ;

    Zitatform

    Warren, Tracey (2007): Conceptualizing breadwinning work. In: Work, employment and society, Jg. 21, H. 2, S. 317-336. DOI:10.1177/0950017007076642

    Abstract

    "One of the most widely used concepts in the sociology of women and men's work is that of the breadwinner. Given its centrality to and in so many core academic debates, it is surprising that so little attention has been paid to theorizing and operationalizing breadwinning. Breadwinning seems to lie uncontested, with an unproblematic taken-for-granted, common sense meaning in current sociology.The article reviews how breadwinning has been approached in sociology and how it has been operationalized in empirical studies. After identifying different dimensions of breadwinning, the article explores their reliability in a descriptive analysis of women and men's breadwinning work in Europe. It is concluded that the meaning of breadwinning should be debated as routinely as that of caring." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Household employment patterns in an enlarged European Union (2006)

    Haas, Barbara ; Steiber, Nadia ; Wallace, Claire; Hartel, Margit;

    Zitatform

    Haas, Barbara, Nadia Steiber, Margit Hartel & Claire Wallace (2006): Household employment patterns in an enlarged European Union. In: Work, employment and society, Jg. 20, H. 4, S. 751-771. DOI:10.1177/0950017006069813

    Abstract

    "Our aim is to contribute to better understanding of why different practices relating to the division of paid labour by sex in couple households are still to be found in different parts of Europe. We analyse data on the distribution of dominant household employment patterns in eight countries: Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, the Netherlands, Romania, Slovenia, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Using comparative survey evidence for a large total sample (N = 10,123), we examine how national differences in terms of the gender division of paid work correspond with predictions drawn from well-established structuralist and culturalist theories of the determinants of cross-country variations.The findings call for a further elaboration of conventional approaches to explaining gendered employment patterns in an enlarged Europe." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    The decline of the male breadwinner model: implications for work and care (2001)

    Lewis, Jane;

    Zitatform

    Lewis, Jane (2001): The decline of the male breadwinner model. Implications for work and care. In: Social Politics, Jg. 8, H. 2, S. 152-169. DOI:10.1093/sp/8.2.152

    Abstract

    Entscheidende Konstruktionsmerkmale der meisten staatlichen Wohlfahrtssysteme sind die beiden Faktoren soziale Fürsorge und Erwerbsarbeit. Dabei bildet die Entlohnung der Erwerbsarbeit den Maßstab für die sozialen Leistungen. Das Konstrukt der Erwerbsarbeit wird weitgehend bestimmt vom Familienmodell des männlichen Ernährers, wobei der Frau die Rolle der Sorge für Kinder und Familie zukommt und ihr Sozialleistungen nur im Rahmen des Einkommens männlichen Partners (meist in Form von Freibeträgen) zukommen. Dieses klassische Familienmodell, das besonders in Großbritannien, Irland, Deutschland und den Niederlanden gepflegt wurde, ist von der gesellschaftlichen Wirklichkeit überholt. Der Beitrag zeigt am Beispiel Großbritanniens und der Niederlande, dass die Entwicklung hin zu einem Familienmodell geht, in der alle erwachsenen Familienmitglieder dem Arbeitsmarkt zur Verfügung stehen (adult-worker model family). Zur Zeit bestehen die meisten Familien noch aus 'anderthalb Ernährern', wobei den Frauen die - oft schlecht bezahlte - Teilzeitarbeit obliegt. Um die Rolle der Frauen wirklich gleichberechtigt zu gestalten, muss von der Politik die Gleichwertigkeit von Erwerbsarbeit und unbezahlter Familienarbeit anerkannt werden, die Übergänge im Lebenslauf müssen gefördert werden, und geringe Einkommen müssen aufgestockt werden. Dies gilt insbesondere im Hinblick darauf, dass es in vielen nord- und westeuropäischen Ländern immer mehr alleinerziehende Müttern gibt, deren Zugang zu bezahlter Arbeit verbessert werden muss. (IAB)

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