Does Marital Status Make a Difference?
- 1 September 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Family Issues
- Vol. 14 (3) , 401-420
- https://doi.org/10.1177/019251393014003004
Abstract
In this article, a comparison is made between the time that cohabiting and married women and men spend doing housework, to determine whether there are differences between them and to isolate the sources of those differences. Differences in cohabiting and married women's and men's household labor time are interpreted in light of the way that marital status may affect how gender is accomplished. Using the National Survey of Families and Households, the authors found that marital status affects women's household labor time but not men's; married women spend significantly more time on housework than do cohabiting women. In addition, the gap between cohabiting and married women's housework time cannot be accounted for by sociodemographic differences between them. It was also found that cohabiting women are more like single, noncohabiting women than they are like married women. That is, the research demonstrates the uniqueness of married women. It is not simply the presence of a man that is associated with women's spending more time on housework; it is the presence of a husband.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gender, Work-Family Roles, and Psychological Well-Being of BlacksJournal of Marriage and Family, 1991
- Fifty Years of Family Demography: A Record of Social ChangeJournal of Marriage and Family, 1988
- The Division of Labor at HomeSocial Forces, 1987
- The Division of Task Responsibility in U.S. Households: Longitudinal Adjustments to ChangeSocial Forces, 1986
- 20/20 Vision: A Perspective on Women's Changing Roles and the Structure of American Families, Past and FutureFrontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, 1986
- Explaining Husbands' Participation in Domestic LaborThe Sociological Quarterly, 1985
- Predicting premarital cohabitation: Employing individuals versus couples as the units of analysisJournal of Family and Economic Issues, 1984
- Married and Unmarried Cohabitation in the United States: 1980Journal of Marriage and Family, 1983
- Cohabitation before marriageJournal of Family and Economic Issues, 1980
- Nonmarital cohabitationJournal of Family and Economic Issues, 1978