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Gender and children's housework time in China: examining behavior modeling in context

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Gender and children's housework time in China: examining behavior modeling in context. / Hu, Yang.
In: Journal of Marriage and Family, Vol. 77, No. October, 30.10.2015, p. 1126–1143.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Hu Y. Gender and children's housework time in China: examining behavior modeling in context. Journal of Marriage and Family. 2015 Oct 30;77(October):1126–1143. Epub 2015 Jul 29. doi: 10.1111/jomf.12225

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Hu, Yang. / Gender and children's housework time in China : examining behavior modeling in context. In: Journal of Marriage and Family. 2015 ; Vol. 77, No. October. pp. 1126–1143.

Bibtex

@article{e04ffbb86de745ab9edd29b782f56161,
title = "Gender and children's housework time in China: examining behavior modeling in context",
abstract = "Differentiated gender roles in adulthood are rooted in one's gender role socialization. In order to understand the persistence of gender inequalities in the domestic sphere, we need to examine the gendered patterns of children's housework time. Although researchers have identified behavior modeling as a major mechanism of gender role reproduction and characterized gender socialization as a contextually embedded process, few have investigated contextual variation in behavior modeling, particularly in non-Western developing countries. Analyzing data from the China Family Panel Studies 2010, the author examined the differences in behavior modeling between boys and girls age 10–15 from 2-parent families (N = 1,903) in rural and urban China. The results revealed distinctive gendered interplays in the way parental housework and employment behavior helps shape children's housework time. This analysis is a crucial illustration of how the distinctive sociocultural contexts of rural and urban China moderate the effects of housework-behavior modeling on intergenerational gender role socialization.",
keywords = "China, Gender, Intergenerational Relations, children, housework, houswork division",
author = "Yang Hu",
year = "2015",
month = oct,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1111/jomf.12225",
language = "English",
volume = "77",
pages = "1126–1143",
journal = "Journal of Marriage and Family",
issn = "0022-2445",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "October",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gender and children's housework time in China

T2 - examining behavior modeling in context

AU - Hu, Yang

PY - 2015/10/30

Y1 - 2015/10/30

N2 - Differentiated gender roles in adulthood are rooted in one's gender role socialization. In order to understand the persistence of gender inequalities in the domestic sphere, we need to examine the gendered patterns of children's housework time. Although researchers have identified behavior modeling as a major mechanism of gender role reproduction and characterized gender socialization as a contextually embedded process, few have investigated contextual variation in behavior modeling, particularly in non-Western developing countries. Analyzing data from the China Family Panel Studies 2010, the author examined the differences in behavior modeling between boys and girls age 10–15 from 2-parent families (N = 1,903) in rural and urban China. The results revealed distinctive gendered interplays in the way parental housework and employment behavior helps shape children's housework time. This analysis is a crucial illustration of how the distinctive sociocultural contexts of rural and urban China moderate the effects of housework-behavior modeling on intergenerational gender role socialization.

AB - Differentiated gender roles in adulthood are rooted in one's gender role socialization. In order to understand the persistence of gender inequalities in the domestic sphere, we need to examine the gendered patterns of children's housework time. Although researchers have identified behavior modeling as a major mechanism of gender role reproduction and characterized gender socialization as a contextually embedded process, few have investigated contextual variation in behavior modeling, particularly in non-Western developing countries. Analyzing data from the China Family Panel Studies 2010, the author examined the differences in behavior modeling between boys and girls age 10–15 from 2-parent families (N = 1,903) in rural and urban China. The results revealed distinctive gendered interplays in the way parental housework and employment behavior helps shape children's housework time. This analysis is a crucial illustration of how the distinctive sociocultural contexts of rural and urban China moderate the effects of housework-behavior modeling on intergenerational gender role socialization.

KW - China

KW - Gender

KW - Intergenerational Relations

KW - children

KW - housework

KW - houswork division

U2 - 10.1111/jomf.12225

DO - 10.1111/jomf.12225

M3 - Journal article

VL - 77

SP - 1126

EP - 1143

JO - Journal of Marriage and Family

JF - Journal of Marriage and Family

SN - 0022-2445

IS - October

ER -