Full Citation
Title: Gender Deviance and Household Work: The Role of Occupation
Citation Type: Conference Paper
Publication Year: 2009
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Abstract: This article takes a new approach to gender and housework by identifying a new measure of gender deviance--work in gender-atypical occupations--and by arguing that men who do "women's work" and women who do "men's work" in the labor market may seek to neutralize their gender deviance by doing male- and female-typed work at home. Analysis of data from the National Survey of Families and Households and the 2003-7 waves of the American Time Use Survey shows that men who do "women's work" in the market spend more time on male-typed housework relative to men in gender-balanced occupations and their wives spend more time on female-typed housework. Women in gender-atypical occupations also do more female-typed housework than women in gender-balanced occupations. The article provides clearer evidence about the important ways in which cultural conceptions of gender shape and are shaped by economic processes.
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Authors: Schneider, Daniel
Conference Name: Princeton University, Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Workshop
Publisher Location: Princeton, NJ
Data Collections: IPUMS Time Use - ATUS
Topics: Family and Marriage, Gender, Labor Force and Occupational Structure
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