德国移民夫妇与本土夫妇日常家务与非日常家务的分工

IF 1.5 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY
Theresa Nutz, Lisa Schmid, Reinhard Pollak
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引用次数: 1

摘要

家务分工中的性别不平等是一个长期存在的问题,在不同的国家背景下也是如此,而本地夫妇和移民夫妇内部和之间的差异在很大程度上仍不清楚。本研究以德国为个案,考察伴侣的迁移星座与家务分工之间的关系。我们区分本地人和第一代移民,在第一代移民中,我们根据他们的原籍地区进行区分。在家务分工方面,我们分析了传统的女性常规任务和男性非常规任务。根据性别和资源解释,本研究预计本地、移民和混合(即本地/移民)夫妇分担家务的方式会发生性别差异。利用德国家庭人口学小组研究的新数据(FReDA-GGS样本,2021),该论文采用OLS回归模型预测了11223对不同性别同居夫妇的家务分工。这项研究发现,移民夫妇在日常家务劳动中存在性别传统差异,不同原籍地区之间存在异质性。具体而言,亚洲和东欧夫妇中的女性往往比本国夫妇做更多的家务,而西方国家夫妇的家务分工更为平等。在混合伴侣中,如果男性伴侣是移民,那么日常任务的分配是非常不平等的。然而,混合伴侣的非常规任务大多由本地伴侣完成,不分性别。研究结果表明,在大多数移民群体中,日常家务的划分符合传统的性别角色,而非日常家务,如需要特定国家知识的财务任务,则受到当地身份的影响,这篇文章属于“家庭研究和人口分析——德国家庭人口小组研究的新见解”的特刊。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Division of Routine and Non-Routine Housework Among Migrant and Native Couples in Germany
Gender inequality in the division of household chores is a persistent issue over time and across country contexts, while differences within and between native and migrant couples remain largely unclear. Relying on the German country case, this study examines the association between partners’ migration constellations and the division of housework. We differentiate between natives and first-generation migrants, and within first-generation migrants, we differentiate by their regions of origin. For the division of housework, we analyse traditionally female routine tasks and male non-routine tasks. Following gender and resource explanations, this study expects gendered variation in the way native, migrant, and mixed (i.e., native/migrant) couples divide housework. Utilising novel data from the German Family Demography Panel Study (FReDA-GGS sample, 2021), the paper employs OLS regression models to predict the division of housework among 11,223 cohabiting different-sex couples. The study finds a gender-traditional divide in routine household tasks among migrant couples, with heterogeneity across regions of origin. Specifically, women in Asian and Eastern European couples tend to do more routine tasks than their native counterparts, while the division of routine housework in couples from Western countries is more egalitarian. In mixed couples, the division of routine tasks is highly unequal if the male partner is a migrant. Non-routine tasks in mixed couples are, however, mostly performed by the native partner, irrespective of gender. The results suggest that the division of routine housework conforms to traditional gender roles across most migrant groups, while non-routine housework, such as financial tasks that require country-specific knowledge, is influenced by the native status, which serves as a resource in itself. * This article belongs to a special issue on “Family Research and Demographic Analysis – New Insights from the German Family Demography Panel Study (FReDA)”.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
26 weeks
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