When mothers do it all: Gender-role norms and women’s fertility intentions in post-industrial societies
Post-industrial countries with high rates of female labour force participation have generally had low fertility rates, but recent studies demonstrate that this is no longer the case. This has generated increased attention to how greater gender equality in the private sphere of the household may cont...
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2024
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-53602025-01-10T03:22:20Z When mothers do it all: Gender-role norms and women’s fertility intentions in post-industrial societies HAN, Sinn Won GOWEN, Ohjae BRINTON, Mary C. Post-industrial countries with high rates of female labour force participation have generally had low fertility rates, but recent studies demonstrate that this is no longer the case. This has generated increased attention to how greater gender equality in the private sphere of the household may contribute to a positive relationship between women’s employment rates and fertility. Building on recent scholarship demonstrating the multidimensionality of gender-role attitudes, we argue that conversely, the prevalence of a gender-role ideology that supports women’s employment but places greater priority on their role as caregivers may depress the higher-order fertility intentions of working mothers. Using data from 25 European countries, we find that this type of gender-role ideology (egalitarian familism) moderates the relationship between mothers’ full-time employment and their intention to have a second child. This holds even after accounting for key features of the policy environment that are likely to mitigate work-family conflict. The analysis suggests that conflicting normative expectations for women’s work and family roles tend to dampen working mothers’ second-order fertility intentions, independent of work-family reconciliation policies. 2024-04-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4101 info:doi/10.1093/esr/jcad036 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/5360/viewcontent/MothersDoItAll_av.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Family, Life Course, and Society Gender and Sexuality |
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Family, Life Course, and Society Gender and Sexuality HAN, Sinn Won GOWEN, Ohjae BRINTON, Mary C. When mothers do it all: Gender-role norms and women’s fertility intentions in post-industrial societies |
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Post-industrial countries with high rates of female labour force participation have generally had low fertility rates, but recent studies demonstrate that this is no longer the case. This has generated increased attention to how greater gender equality in the private sphere of the household may contribute to a positive relationship between women’s employment rates and fertility. Building on recent scholarship demonstrating the multidimensionality of gender-role attitudes, we argue that conversely, the prevalence of a gender-role ideology that supports women’s employment but places greater priority on their role as caregivers may depress the higher-order fertility intentions of working mothers. Using data from 25 European countries, we find that this type of gender-role ideology (egalitarian familism) moderates the relationship between mothers’ full-time employment and their intention to have a second child. This holds even after accounting for key features of the policy environment that are likely to mitigate work-family conflict. The analysis suggests that conflicting normative expectations for women’s work and family roles tend to dampen working mothers’ second-order fertility intentions, independent of work-family reconciliation policies. |
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text |
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HAN, Sinn Won GOWEN, Ohjae BRINTON, Mary C. |
author_facet |
HAN, Sinn Won GOWEN, Ohjae BRINTON, Mary C. |
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HAN, Sinn Won |
title |
When mothers do it all: Gender-role norms and women’s fertility intentions in post-industrial societies |
title_short |
When mothers do it all: Gender-role norms and women’s fertility intentions in post-industrial societies |
title_full |
When mothers do it all: Gender-role norms and women’s fertility intentions in post-industrial societies |
title_fullStr |
When mothers do it all: Gender-role norms and women’s fertility intentions in post-industrial societies |
title_full_unstemmed |
When mothers do it all: Gender-role norms and women’s fertility intentions in post-industrial societies |
title_sort |
when mothers do it all: gender-role norms and women’s fertility intentions in post-industrial societies |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2024 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4101 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/5360/viewcontent/MothersDoItAll_av.pdf |
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