Attitudes, women’s employment and the domestic division of labour
- 1 June 2005
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Work, Employment & Society
- Vol. 19 (2) , 213-233
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017005053168
Abstract
This article draws on a repeat of a 1994 survey, carried out in 2002, in three contrasting countries: Britain, Norway and the Czech Republic.The 1994 survey demonstrated that there was a significant association between more ‘liberal’ gender role attitudes and a less traditional division of domestic labour in all three countries. In 2002, this association was no longer significant for Britain and Norway. Gender role attitudes had become less traditional in all three countries, although women’s attitudes had changed more than men’s.There had been little change in the gendered allocation of household tasks, suggesting a slowing down of the increase of men’s involvement in domestic work. It is suggested that work intensification may be making increased participation in domestic work by men more difficult. Although national governments are becoming more aware and supportive of the problems of work-life ‘balance’, an increase in competitiveness and intensification at workplaces may be working against more ‘positive’ policy supports.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- ‘High‐performance’ Management Practices, Working Hours and Work–Life BalanceBritish Journal of Industrial Relations, 2003
- The complexity of family policy reform: The case of NorwayEuropean Societies, 2003
- Women, Work and Equal Opportunities in Post-Communist TransitionWork, Employment & Society, 2003
- A Woman's Place … Employment and Family Life for Men and WomenPublished by SAGE Publications ,2003
- Reflexive Fathers: Negotiating Parental Leave and Working LifeGender, Work & Organization, 2002
- How Many Hours? Work-Time Regimes and Preferences in European CountriesPublished by Springer Nature ,2002
- Is Anyone Doing the Housework? Trends in the Gender Division of Household LaborSocial Forces, 2000
- Faces of Inequality: Gender, Class, and Patterns of Inequalities in Different Types of Welfare StatesSocial Politics, 2000
- Employment and Caring in British and Norwegian Banking: An Exploration through Individual CareersWork, Employment & Society, 2000
- Working Fathers - Caught in the Web of the Symbolic Order of GenderActa Sociologica, 1997