Generational Changes in Gender-Role Attitudes: Britain in a Cross-National Perspective
- 1 August 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Sociology
- Vol. 30 (3) , 471-492
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0038038596030003004
Abstract
This paper compares the nature and extent of change in gender-role attitudes in Britain with other nations. We hypothesise that while many of the changes would be similar across nations reflecting, in part, the increased importance of women's labour-force participation, the pace and sources of attitudinal change would be different in the different nations. Comparisons are made over the last decade between Britain, the United States and Germany. Using data from the International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) additional comparisons over a shorter time period are made with Ireland, the Netherlands and Italy. Data from the General Social Surveys of America (GSS) and Germany (ALLBUS) reveal that there has been a marked liberal shift in attitudes, with more of the change occurring within cohorts than through the process of cohort succession. In Britain, data from the British Social Attitudes surveys (BSA) reveal a slower and less consistent pace of change, with evidence of a growing gender difference in beliefs that maternal employment may be harmful to children.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Risk SocietyPublished by SAGE Publications ,2005
- Economic necessity or self-actualization? Attitudes toward women's labour-force participation in East and West GermanyEuropean Sociological Review, 1994
- The Separation of Work and the Family: Attitudes Towards Women's Labour-Force Participation in Germany, Great Britain, and the United StatesEuropean Sociological Review, 1992
- Occupational Change Over Childbirth: Evidence from a National SurveySociology, 1991
- Effects of maternal employment in the two-parent family.American Psychologist, 1989
- ATTITUDES TOWARD WOMEN'S FAMILIAL ROLES:Gender & Society, 1988
- Changes in Role Orientations of WomenJournal of Family Issues, 1986
- Sex-Role Attitudes:1972-1980Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1982
- Trends in United States Men's and Women's Sex-Role Attitudes: 1972 to 1978American Sociological Review, 1981
- A Woman for President? Changing Responses: 1958-1972Public Opinion Quarterly, 1974