Gender and family change in industrialized countries

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Bibliographic Information

Gender and family change in industrialized countries

edited by Karen Oppenheim Mason and An-Magritt Jensen

(International studies in demography)

Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1995

Available at  / 28 libraries

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Note

Papers presented at a seminar organized by the Committee on Gender and Population of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population and held in Rome, Jan. 1992

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This volume focuses on the relationship between change in the family and change in the roles of women and men on contemporary industrial societies. Of central concern is whether change in gender roles has fuelled - or is merely historically coincident with - such changes in the family as rising divorce rates, increases in out-of-wedlock childbearing, declining marriage rates, and a growing disconnection between the lives of men and children. Covering more that twenty countries, including the USA, the countries of western Europe, and Japan, each essay in the volume is organized around an important theoretical or policy question; all offer new data analyses, and several offer prescriptions of how to fashion more equitable and humane family and gender systems. The second demographic transition and microeconomic theory of marital exchange are the dominant theoretical models considered; several chapters feature state-of-the-art quantitative analyses of large scale surveys.

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