在多代同堂的家庭中维持传统:印度妇女的时间利用和无偿家务劳动

IF 2.3 3区 经济学 Q2 ECONOMICS Journal of Family and Economic Issues Pub Date : 2024-03-08 DOI:10.1007/s10834-024-09948-w
Balhasan Ali, Aditi B. Prasad, Preeti Dhillon, Abdul Shaban
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在印度,对妇女的社会偏见在文化上根深蒂固,妇女承担着不公平和不成比例的无偿工作负担,往往沦为 "非生产性劳动"。核心家庭正在迅速取代多代同堂家庭,这可能会对妇女的流动性以及在工作和家庭生活之间取得平衡的能力产生重大影响。本文探讨了多代同堂和多组合家庭中工作年龄妇女从事无偿家务劳动的时间使用模式,揭示了家庭责任的复杂动态以及对性别平等的潜在影响。本研究使用的数据来自国家抽样调查办公室(NSSO)于 2019 年 1 月至 12 月进行的印度时间使用调查(2019 年)。我们的研究对象为 15 至 64 岁的工作年龄妇女,样本量为 174 621 个。研究采用负二项回归法来解释解释性因素对妇女无偿家务劳动时间及其家庭动态的影响。我们的研究结果表明,在整个生命周期中,无偿工作中持续存在着显著的性别差异。具体而言,与未婚女性相比,已婚女性承担着不成比例的无偿工作负担。受过高等教育的适龄女性花在无偿家务劳动上的时间会减少。我们发现,妇女表现出了最矛盾的特征,复杂的印度社会分层导致了无偿家务劳动的巨大差异,上层种姓的印度教徒、穆斯林和锡克教妇女投入的时间最多。与生活在多代同堂家庭中的妇女相比,生活在核心家庭中的妇女平均无偿工作时间更长。在女性占主导地位的家庭中,妇女的无偿家务劳动会减少,而在男性占主导地位的家庭中,妇女的无偿家务劳动会增加。虽然亲生父母比姻亲更支持妇女,但父母和姻亲的教育程度对无偿家务劳动有重大影响。我们的研究具有政策意义,探讨了工作年龄妇女在家庭和经济工作之间可能遇到的冲突。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Sustaining the Tradition in Multigeneration Families: Women’s Time Use and Unpaid Domestic Work in India

In India, social prejudices against women are culturally entrenched, and women carry an unfair and disproportionate burden of unpaid work, often reduced to “unproductive labor”. Nuclear families are rapidly replacing multigenerational families, which could have a significant impact on women’s mobility and capacity to strike a balance between work and family life.

This article explores the time use pattern of working-age women in unpaid domestic work in multigenerational and multi-compositional households, shedding light on the intricate dynamics of household responsibilities and the potential implications on gender equality. This study uses data from the Time Use Survey (2019) of India, conducted by the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) from January – December 2019. Our study considers working-age women between 15 and 64 years and the sample size is 174,621. A negative binomial regression approach is used to explain the effect of explanatory factors on women’s time spent on unpaid domestic work and its family dynamics. Our findings reveal a significant gender disparity in unpaid work persisting across the lifespan. Specifically, married women bear a disproportionate burden of unpaid work compared to their unmarried counterparts. Higher education reduces the time spent by a working-age woman on unpaid domestic work. We find that women exhibit the most paradoxical traits, and the complex Indian social stratification contributes to a huge disparity in unpaid domestic work, with upper-caste Hindu, Muslim, and Sikh women putting in the most hours.

The presence of school-age children increases the amount of time women spend on unpaid domestic work. Women living in a nuclear family, on average, have higher levels of unpaid work compared to women living in multigenerational households. Unpaid domestic work of women reduces in female predominant households while increases in male predominant households. While natal parents are more supportive than in-laws, the education of parents and in-laws has a significant impact on unpaid domestic work. Our study has policy implications and discusses the conflicts working-age women could encounter between family and economic work.

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来源期刊
Journal of Family and Economic Issues
Journal of Family and Economic Issues Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics and Econometrics
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
12.50%
发文量
67
期刊介绍: Journal of Family and Economic Issues is an interdisciplinary publication that explores the intricate relationship between the family and its economic environment. Peer-reviewed contributions address important issues in family management, household labor and productivity, relationships between economic and non-economic issues including health and healthcare, as well as interrelations between external settings and family life, including family policy, work, and community. The journal features the following types of submissions: original research, critical reviews, brief communications, invited letters to the editor, and reviews of significant books on the field.
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