Shifting the breadwinning boundary - The role of men's breadwinner status and their gender ideologies

被引:40
|
作者
Zuo, HP [1 ]
机构
[1] St Cloud State Univ, Dept Sociol & Anthropol, St Cloud, MN 56301 USA
关键词
men's breadwinner status; gender ideologies; breadwinning boundary; structure; agency;
D O I
10.1177/0192513X03259144
中图分类号
D669 [社会生活与社会问题]; C913 [社会生活与社会问题];
学科分类号
1204 ;
摘要
This study examined the role of men's breadwinner status and their gender ideologies in shifting the breadwinning boundary. Data come from a 3-wave panel survey of 522 married men in 1980, 1983, and 1988. A strong effect of men's breadwinner status on their ideologies is found in 1983 but not in 1988, whereas the reversed pattern holds for the impact of ideology on status. The direction of their impact on each other is consistent with the hypothesis that men with a lower breadwinner status are more likely to embrace egalitarian ideology. Similarly, egalitarian believers are more likely to engage in the equal sharing of breadwinning. The lack of a significant effect of ideology on status in 1983 and status on ideology in 1988 is largely attributable to the changing family stages of childrearing. The study suggests that, although a decline in men's breadwinning status is likely to promote egalitarian ideology, men's egalitarian ideology cannot effect a structural change in breadwinning without the diminution of structural constraints elsewhere.
引用
收藏
页码:811 / 832
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Manfluencers and Young Men’s Misogynistic Attitudes: The Role of Perceived Threats to Men’s Status
    Emma A. Renström
    Hanna Bäck
    Sex Roles, 2024, 90 (12) : 1787 - 1806
  • [22] The Aging Men's Masculinity Ideologies Inventory (AMMII): Dimensionality, Variance Composition, Measurement Invariance by Gender, and Validity
    Levant, Ronald F.
    Webster, Britney A.
    Stanley, Jennifer T.
    Thompson, Edward H.
    PSYCHOLOGY OF MEN & MASCULINITIES, 2020, 21 (01): : 46 - 57
  • [23] BETWEEN WOMEN'S RIGHTS AND MEN'S AUTHORITY Masculinity and Shifting Discourses of Gender Difference in Urban Uganda
    Wyrod, Robert
    GENDER & SOCIETY, 2008, 22 (06) : 799 - 823
  • [24] Gender and nursing in Portugal: The focus on men's double status of dominant and dominated
    Santos, Maria Helena
    Amancio, Ligia
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF IBERIAN STUDIES, 2019, 32 (03) : 159 - 172
  • [25] Family employment status and gender role attitudes - A comparison of women and men college graduates
    Cassidy, ML
    Warren, BO
    GENDER & SOCIETY, 1996, 10 (03) : 312 - 329
  • [26] Men's and Women's Gender-Role Attitudes across the Transition to Parenthood: Accounting for Child's Gender
    Perales, Francisco
    Jarallah, Yara
    Baxter, Janeen
    SOCIAL FORCES, 2018, 97 (01) : 251 - 275
  • [27] Media and Modern Manhood: Testing Associations Between Media Consumption and Young Men's Acceptance of Traditional Gender Ideologies
    Giaccardi, Soraya
    Ward, L. Monique
    Seabrook, Rita C.
    Manago, Adriana
    Lippman, Julia
    SEX ROLES, 2016, 75 (3-4) : 151 - 163
  • [28] Gender-Role Conflict and Men's Body Satisfaction: The Moderating Role of Age
    Murray, Tegan
    Lewis, Vivienne
    PSYCHOLOGY OF MEN & MASCULINITY, 2014, 15 (01) : 40 - 48
  • [29] Men's gender role conflict and contraceptive use: An examination in Kenya
    Newmann, S.
    Rocca, C.
    Zakaras, J.
    Ndunyu, L.
    Gitome, S.
    Bukusi, E.
    Dworkin, S.
    CONTRACEPTION, 2018, 98 (04) : 358 - 358
  • [30] Good Fellows: Men's Role & Reason in the Fight for Gender Equality
    Spar, Debora L.
    DAEDALUS, 2020, 149 (01) : 222 - 235