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Dunn, Marianne G.; Rochlen, Aaron B.; O'Brien, Karen M. – Journal of Career Development, 2013
Married couples consisting of female breadwinners and male primary caretakers are increasing in prevalence and visibility. However, little is known about the experiences of these families, particularly about salient challenges and dynamics related to this work-family arrangement. Through inductive qualitative analysis, the current study…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Mothers, Fathers, Parent Role
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Hellerstein, Judith K.; Morrill, Melinda Sandler – Journal of Human Resources, 2011
We examine whether women's rising labor force participation led to increased intergenerational transmission of occupation from fathers to daughters. We develop a model where fathers invest in human capital that is specific to their own occupations. Our model generates an empirical test where we compare the trends in the probabilities that women…
Descriptors: Daughters, Fathers, Employed Women, Career Choice
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Clark, Shelley; Kenney, Catherine – Social Forces, 2010
Furstenberg et al. (1995) suggested that one unanticipated consequence of current high levels of divorce might be a "matrilineal tilt" in intergenerational wealth flows. This research uses six waves of the Health and Retirement Survey (1992 to 2002) to investigate this possibility with respect to financial transfers from parents to their…
Descriptors: Demography, Family Financial Resources, Financial Support, Divorce
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Maume, David J. – Social Forces, 2008
It may be premature to think that contemporary families are egalitarian because wives are working more and fathers are more involved with children. This research contends that egalitarianism is reflected in gender similarity in missing work to attend to children's needs. Drawing from two national surveys of dual-earner parents, familial factors…
Descriptors: National Surveys, Gender Differences, Mothers, Child Caregivers
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Dykstra, Pearl A.; Hagestad, Gunhild O. – Journal of Family Issues, 2007
The article focuses on findings that were replicated across several countries and considers their relevance for future older adults. Key findings are that (a) childlessness makes more of a difference in men's than in women's lives, (b) never-married women are a childless category with particularly favorable characteristics, and (c) childless…
Descriptors: Childlessness, Parents, Males, Females
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Rosenfeld, Rachel A. – American Sociological Review, 1978
This paper suggests that the mother's occupation as well as the father's occupation affect a daughter's occupational destination. (Author/EB)
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Employed Women, Fathers, Mothers
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Douthitt, Robin A. – Canadian Home Economics Journal, 1988
A study found that, over time, married women employed full time have not decreased the time spent working in the home. Married men with young children have increased the time spent on home work. Single parents' time most closely resembled that of married women. (JOW)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Fathers, Foreign Countries, Homemakers
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Radin, Norma; Harold-Goldsmith, Rena – Child Development, 1989
Investigated three hypotheses regarding structural predictors of domestic work of fathers of 48 families with a preschooler or kindergartner. Father involvement was greatest when the father was jobless and held a flexible view of the male role, the mother was working, and the target child was the oldest or nearly the oldest. (RJC)
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Employed Women, Fathers, Kindergarten
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Owen, Margaret Tresch; And Others – Child Development, 1984
Classifications of the quality of infant-mother and infant-father attachments were made for 59 children at 12 and 20 months of age using the Ainsworth strange situation paradigm. Stability of attachments from 12 to 20 months was examined in four groups defined by maternal employment status. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Employed Women, Employment Level, Fathers
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Baruch, Grace K.; Barnett, Rosalind C. – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1981
Fathers' independent performance of child-care tasks was: (1) positively related to maternal work role and nontraditional sex role ideology; and (2) negatively related to daughters' stereotyping and to fathers' perceptions of themselves as stereotypically masculine. Wives' role-pattern satisfaction was negatively related to both joint and…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Employed Women, Family Relationship, Fathers
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Suppal, Preeti; Roopnarine, Jaipaul L. – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1999
Assessed parental involvement in child care as a function of family structure and maternal employment in 92 dual-wage and 103 single-wage families in India. Parents in single-wage families spent more time in primary caregiving, but fathers' involvement did not vary as a function of mothers' employment status or family structure. (SLD)
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Employed Women, Family Structure, Fathers
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Brescoll, Victoria L.; Uhlmann, Eric Luis – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2005
Three studies investigated attitudes toward traditional parents (stay-at-home mothers and employed fathers) and nontraditional parents (stay-at-home fathers and employed mothers) among adult men and women. Using a between-subjects design, Study 1 found that nontraditional parents were liked significantly less than traditional parents. Participants…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Negative Attitudes, Traditionalism, Fathers
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Acock, Alan C.; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1982
Examined the effects of maternal employment on parent-youth similarity using a sample of 647 father-mother-youth triads. Found maternal employment had few impacts on the father's influence except for fathers having slightly greater influence in expressive areas. Maternal employment appeared to lower the influence of the mother. (Author)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Employed Women, Employment Level, Family Relationship
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Noonan, Mary C.; Estes, Sarah Beth; Glass, Jennifer L. – Journal of Family Issues, 2007
Using data from a U.S. midwestern sample of mothers and fathers, the authors examine whether using workplace flexibility policies alters time spent in housework and child care. They hypothesize that an individual's policy use will lead to more time in domestic labor and that his or her spouse's policy use will lead to less time in domestic labor.…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Employed Women, Mothers, Family Life
Barber, Betty L. – 1982
Trends in fertility patterns show an increase in births among 30- to 40-year-old college educated career women. To investigate the attitudes, characteristics, role stresses, and satisfactions of married career women who have delayed childbearing until after age 28, and the attitudes of their husbands toward their careers and roles, 35 married…
Descriptors: Dual Career Family, Employed Women, Fathers, Home Management
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