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Liu, Siwei; Hynes, Kathryn – Family Relations, 2012
Despite considerable interest in the causes and consequences of work-family conflict, and the frequent suggestion in fertility research that difficulty in balancing work and family is one of the factors leading to low fertility rates in several developed countries, little research uses longitudinal data to examine whether women who report…
Descriptors: Labor Force Nonparticipants, Employed Women, Child Health, Developed Nations
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Meiners, Jane E.; Olson, Geraldine I. – Family Relations, 1987
Examined time allotments to household, paid, and unpaid work for farm, rural nonfarm, and urban women. Findings from 2,100 two-parent, two-child families revealed no significant differences among groups in allocation of time to household work. Of three groups, farm women spent more time in unpaid work, and rural nonfarm women devoted most time to…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Employed Women, Farmers, Females
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Keith, Pat M.; Schafer, Robert B. – Family Relations, 1985
Examined how assessments of role behavior in the family and relative deprivation in work-family situations were linked with depression among homemakers (N=130) and employed married women (N=135). Results showed that negative evaluations of role behavior in the family were more depressing to homemakers than to employed women. (NRB)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Depression (Psychology), Employed Women, Females
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Stull, Donald E.; And Others – Family Relations, 1994
Findings from study of daughters (n=112) in midlife who were caring for their elderly mothers indicated that employment outside of home was related only to increase in physical strain in caregiving. Presence of children in household predicted lower levels of caregiver strain and greater caregiver well-being. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Daughters, Employed Women, Employment