{"title":"双职工夫妇的性别角色态度及其育儿假决定:伴侣影响因素的纵向研究","authors":"Anna M. Stertz, Bettina S. Wiese","doi":"10.1007/s11199-024-01474-1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>This study examines how men and women in heterosexual partnerships influence each other’s parental leave decisions through their gender role attitudes. We differentiate between attitudes toward women’s parental role, women’s worker role, men’s parental role, and men’s worker role, and consider the role of traditional gender ideology denoting an attitude of negatively evaluating mothers’ employment when children are young. We investigated communal traits as a potential moderator to better understand partner effects, i.e., one partner’s role attitudes affecting the other partner’s leave decision. We analyzed longitudinal data from <i>N</i> = 365 heterosexual, mainly German dual-earner couples, collected between pregnancy and about 18 months after the birth of their first child, using the actor-partner interdependence model. We examined mothers’ and fathers’ attitudes toward all five types of gender roles and found that both mothers and fathers were influenced in their leave decisions by their partners’ attitudes toward early maternal employment. Mothers whose partners were more traditional in this regard took longer leaves; fathers whose partners were more traditional took shorter leaves. Fathers’ leave length was also influenced by their partners’ attitudes toward men’s worker role, with more traditional attitudes resulting in shorter leaves. The latter relationship was moderated by fathers’ communal traits, such that more communal fathers were more strongly influenced by their female partners’ attitudes. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本研究探讨了异性伴侣中的男性和女性如何通过其性别角色态度影响对方的育儿假决定。我们区分了对女性育儿角色、女性工作者角色、男性育儿角色和男性工作者角色的态度,并考虑了传统性别意识形态的作用,即在孩子年幼时对母亲的就业持负面评价的态度。我们研究了作为潜在调节因素的社区特质,以更好地理解伴侣效应,即一方的角色态度会影响另一方的休假决定。我们采用行为者-伴侣相互依存模型,分析了 N = 365 对异性恋(主要是德国双职工夫妇)的纵向数据,这些数据收集于夫妇怀孕至第一个孩子出生后约 18 个月之间。我们研究了母亲和父亲对所有五种性别角色的态度,发现母亲和父亲在决定休假时都会受到伴侣对母亲早期就业态度的影响。其伴侣在这方面更传统的母亲休假时间更长;其伴侣更传统的父亲休假时间更短。父亲休假时间的长短也受其伴侣对男性工作者角色的态度影响,态度越传统,休假时间越短。后一种关系受父亲的共性特质调节,共性特质较强的父亲受其女性伴侣态度的影响更大。总之,这项研究拓展了人们对双职工夫妇在家庭早期阶段的相互影响和决策动态的理解。
Dual-Earner Couples’ Gender Role Attitudes and Their Parental Leave Decisions: A Longitudinal Study of Partner Influences
This study examines how men and women in heterosexual partnerships influence each other’s parental leave decisions through their gender role attitudes. We differentiate between attitudes toward women’s parental role, women’s worker role, men’s parental role, and men’s worker role, and consider the role of traditional gender ideology denoting an attitude of negatively evaluating mothers’ employment when children are young. We investigated communal traits as a potential moderator to better understand partner effects, i.e., one partner’s role attitudes affecting the other partner’s leave decision. We analyzed longitudinal data from N = 365 heterosexual, mainly German dual-earner couples, collected between pregnancy and about 18 months after the birth of their first child, using the actor-partner interdependence model. We examined mothers’ and fathers’ attitudes toward all five types of gender roles and found that both mothers and fathers were influenced in their leave decisions by their partners’ attitudes toward early maternal employment. Mothers whose partners were more traditional in this regard took longer leaves; fathers whose partners were more traditional took shorter leaves. Fathers’ leave length was also influenced by their partners’ attitudes toward men’s worker role, with more traditional attitudes resulting in shorter leaves. The latter relationship was moderated by fathers’ communal traits, such that more communal fathers were more strongly influenced by their female partners’ attitudes. Overall, this research extends the understanding of mutual influences and decision-making dynamics in dual-earner couples in the early family phase.
期刊介绍:
Sex Roles: A Journal of Research is a global, multidisciplinary, scholarly, social and behavioral science journal with a feminist perspective. It publishes original research reports as well as original theoretical papers and conceptual review articles that explore how gender organizes people’s lives and their surrounding worlds, including gender identities, belief systems, representations, interactions, relations, organizations, institutions, and statuses. The range of topics covered is broad and dynamic, including but not limited to the study of gendered attitudes, stereotyping, and sexism; gendered contexts, culture, and power; the intersections of gender with race, class, sexual orientation, age, and other statuses and identities; body image; violence; gender (including masculinities) and feminist identities; human sexuality; communication studies; work and organizations; gendered development across the life span or life course; mental, physical, and reproductive health and health care; sports; interpersonal relationships and attraction; activism and social change; economic, political, and legal inequities; and methodological challenges and innovations in doing gender research.