家庭中的关系工作:父母经济决策的性别微观基础

IF 7.1 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY American Sociological Review Pub Date : 2022-11-03 DOI:10.1177/00031224221132295
Aliya Hamid Rao
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引用次数: 3

摘要

在经济不安全的时期,父母如何决定他们能为孩子负担得起什么商品、体验和活动?本文对父母一方失业的美国职业中产阶级家庭进行了72次深入采访。本研究扩展了关系工作的概念,阐明了经济决策的微观基础是如何性别化的。父亲失业的家庭采取关系保护的方法:他们寻求保持对儿童的高支出门槛,并将削减与儿童相关的支出视为对其阶级地位的威胁。这些家庭认为,作为父母,尤其是作为父亲,减少对孩子的支出是失败的。母亲失业的家庭采取关系缩减的方法,降低了儿童基本支出的门槛。这些家庭不愿意在儿童教育上减少支出,但他们不认为在消费品等其他项目上减少支出会威胁到他们的阶级地位。分类关系研究揭示了家庭内部的不平等是如何通过围绕儿童支出的意义制造来再现的,并阐明了父母经济决策变化的一个关键来源。
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Relational Work in the Family: The Gendered Microfoundation of Parents’ Economic Decisions
How do parents decide what goods, experiences, and activities they can afford for their children during times of economic insecurity? This article draws on 72 in-depth interviews with U.S. professional middle-class families in which one parent is unemployed. Extending the concept of relational work, this study illuminates how the microfoundation of economic decisions is gendered. Families where fathers are unemployed take the approach of relational preservation: they seek to maintain a high threshold of expenditures on children and view curtailing child-related spending as a threat to their class status. These families see reducing expenditures on children as a parental, and especially paternal, failure. Families where mothers are unemployed take an approach of relational downscaling, lowering the threshold for essential expenditures on children. These families are reluctant to spend less on children’s education, but they do not view decreasing spending on other items, such as consumer goods, as threatening their class status. Gendering relational work reveals how inequalities within families are reproduced through meaning-making around expenditures on children, and it clarifies a key source of variation in parental economic decision-making.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.30
自引率
3.30%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: The American Sociological Association (ASA) is a non-profit membership association established in 1905. Its mission is to advance sociology as a scientific discipline and profession that serves the public good. ASA is comprised of approximately 12,000 members including faculty members, researchers, practitioners, and students in the field of sociology. Roughly 20% of the members work in government, business, or non-profit organizations. One of ASA's primary endeavors is the publication and dissemination of important sociological research. To this end, they founded the American Sociological Review (ASR) in 1936. ASR is the flagship journal of the association and publishes original works that are of general interest and contribute to the advancement of sociology. The journal seeks to publish new theoretical developments, research results that enhance our understanding of fundamental social processes, and significant methodological innovations. ASR welcomes submissions from all areas of sociology, placing an emphasis on exceptional quality. Aside from ASR, ASA also publishes 14 professional journals and magazines. Additionally, they organize an annual meeting that attracts over 6,000 participants. ASA's membership consists of scholars, professionals, and students dedicated to the study and application of sociology in various domains of society.
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