Parental union dissolution and the gender revolution

IF 3.3 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY
Social Forces Pub Date : 2024-06-02 DOI:10.1093/sf/soae079
Helen Eriksson, Martin Kolk
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Abstract

This study investigates two concurrent trends across Europe and North America: the increasing instability of parental unions and men’s rising contributions to household work. Because children have almost universally resided with their mothers and it is difficult for non-residential fathers to maintain any levels of care work, union dissolutions have potentially slowed societal increases in gender equality. A new family form—50/50 living arrangements—has begun to challenge our understanding of the consequences of union dissolution. Since 50/50 residence requires fathers to take full care responsibility for the child half of the time—something few partnered fathers do—it may even push parents into a more egalitarian division of care work. We have studied care work using Swedish administrative data on parents’ leave from work to care for a sick child. We have created a panel of leave-sharing for children aged 2–11, and use an event-study design to estimate the causal effect of dissolution on the sharing of sick-child leave. The results show that in parental unions dissolving today, the dissolution leads to an increase in fathers’ share of sick-child leave. Whereas union dissolutions have for decades been slowing the gender revolution in Sweden, they are now accelerating it.
解除父母的结合与性别革命
本研究调查了欧洲和北美同时出现的两个趋势:父母结合的不稳定性增加以及男性对家务劳动的贡献增加。由于孩子几乎普遍与母亲居住在一起,而不居住在家中的父亲很难维持任何程度的照料工作,因此,结合的解体有可能减缓社会在性别平等方面的进步。一种新的家庭形式--50/50 居住安排--开始挑战我们对解除婚姻关系后果的理解。由于 50/50 居住安排要求父亲在一半的时间里承担起照顾孩子的全部责任--很少有伴侣关系的父亲会这样做--这甚至会促使父母在照顾孩子的工作上进行更平等的分工。我们利用瑞典关于父母请假照顾生病子女的行政数据,对照料工作进行了研究。我们建立了一个 2-11 岁儿童分担假期的面板,并使用事件研究设计来估计解体对分担生病儿童假期的因果效应。结果表明,在当今解体的父母工会中,工会解体会导致父亲的病儿假份额增加。几十年来,工会解体一直在延缓瑞典的性别革命,而现在却在加速这一进程。
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来源期刊
Social Forces
Social Forces SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
123
期刊介绍: Established in 1922, Social Forces is recognized as a global leader among social research journals. Social Forces publishes articles of interest to a general social science audience and emphasizes cutting-edge sociological inquiry as well as explores realms the discipline shares with psychology, anthropology, political science, history, and economics. Social Forces is published by Oxford University Press in partnership with the Department of Sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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