今晚谁做饭?对加拿大多伦多已婚成年人的时间利用研究。

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY Time & Society Pub Date : 2022-11-01 Epub Date: 2022-05-21 DOI:10.1177/0961463X221100696
Bochu Liu, Michael J Widener, Lindsey G Smith, Steven Farber, Dionne Gesink, Leia M Minaker, Zachary Patterson, Kristian Larsen, Jason Gilliland
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引用次数: 2

摘要

了解已婚成年人如何根据他们的日常时间分配安排与食物有关的劳动是非常重要的,因为不同的安排可能对与饮食有关的健康和性别平等产生影响。从时间使用角度的研究认为,日常活动,如工作、照顾和与食物无关的家务,可能会与食物工作竞争时间。然而,这方面的研究大多集中在个人层面的分析。他们没有考虑到同居伴侣花在食物和非食物相关活动上的时间,这一因素可能有助于解释伴侣如何决定分配时间参加食物活动。本文使用来自加拿大多伦多17对异性伴侣的108份日常时间使用日志,研究了男性和女性伴侣在非食物相关活动上花费的时间如何影响已婚成年人在食物上花费的总时间,以及已婚女性和男性在食物上花费的时间差异。研究结果显示,当伴侣工作时间越长,男性和女性都承担了更多的食物工作。当男性工作时间增加时,夫妻之间的食物工作时间就会减少。在食物工作时间上没有显著的性别差异,但女性照顾时间的增加与夫妻花在食物工作上的总时间的减少有关。男性照料和非食品相关家务的增加与女性和男性之间的食品工作时间差异的增加有关,这有助于确保夫妻一级的食品工作总量不变。男性和女性之间的这些行为差异表明,一个人对伴侣非食物相关任务变化的反应存在性别差异。非食物相关活动与食物工作之间的关联表明,在研究食物工作和其他日常活动的时间利用动态时,需要考虑伙伴的时间分配。
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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Who's cooking tonight? A time-use study of coupled adults in Toronto, Canada.

Understanding how coupled adults arrange food-related labor in relation to their daily time allocation is of great importance because different arrangements may have implications for diet-related health and gender equity. Studies from the time-use perspective argue that daily activities such as work, caregiving, and non-food-related housework can potentially compete for time with foodwork. However, studies in this regard are mostly centered on individual-level analyses. They fail to consider cohabiting partners' time spent on foodwork and non-food-related activities, a factor that could be helpful in explaining how coupled partners decide to allocate time to food activities. Using 108 daily time-use logs from seventeen opposite-gender couples living in Toronto, Canada, this paper examines how male and female partners' time spent on non-food-related activities impact the total amount of time spent on foodwork by coupled adults and the difference in time spent on foodwork between coupled women and men. Results show that both male and female partners took a higher portion of foodwork when their partner worked longer. When men worked for additional time, the couple-level duration of foodwork decreased. Without a significant impact on the gender difference in foodwork duration, women's increased caregiving duration was associated with a reduction of total time spent on foodwork by couples. An increase in caregiving and non-food-related chores by men was associated with an increased difference in duration of foodwork between women and men, which helped secure a constant total amount of foodwork at the couple level. These behavioral variations between men and women demonstrate the gender differences in one's responsiveness to the change of partners' non-food-related tasks. The associations found among non-food-related activities and foodwork are suggestive of a need to account for partners' time allocation when studying the time-use dynamics of foodwork and other daily activities.

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来源期刊
Time & Society
Time & Society SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
10.00%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Time & Society publishes articles, reviews, and scholarly comment discussing the workings of time and temporality across a range of disciplines, including anthropology, geography, history, psychology, and sociology. Work focuses on methodological and theoretical problems, including the use of time in organizational contexts. You"ll also find critiques of and proposals for time-related changes in the formation of public, social, economic, and organizational policies.
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