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Breadwinner model

The breadwinner model is a paradigm of family centered on a breadwinner, "the member of a family who earns the money to support the others."[1] Traditionally, the earner works outside the home to provide the family with income and benefits such as health insurance, while the non-earner stays at home and takes care of children and the elderly. The breadwinner model largely arose in western cultures after industrialization occurred. Before industrialization, all members of the household—including men, women, and children—contributed to the productivity of the household. Gender roles underwent a re-definition as a result of industrialization, with a split between public and private roles for men and women, which did not exist before industrialization.[2]

Since the 1950s, social scientists and feminist theorists such as Germaine Greer have increasingly criticized the gendered division of work and care and the expectation that the breadwinner role should be fulfilled by men. Norwegian government policy has increasingly targeted men as fathers, as a tool of changing gender relations.[3] Recent years have seen a shift in gender norms for the breadwinner role in the U.S. A 2013 Pew Research study found that women were the sole or primary breadwinners in 40% of heterosexual relationships with children.[4]

Rise

In Britain, the breadwinner model developed among the emerging middle class towards the end of the industrial revolution in the mid-nineteenth century. Prior to this, in low-income families, a subsistence wage was paid on the basis of the individual worker's output, with all members of the family expected to contribute to the household upkeep.

There was another side to the transformation of wage relations in mid-19th-century Britain involving two closely related changes: first, a shift in the prevailing wage form, from a joint to an individual payment; and second, a shift in the predominant subsistence norm of a living wage, from a family group's income to the ideal of an adult male-breadwinner wage. This is the notion that the wage earned by a husband ought to be sufficient to support his family without his wife and young children having to work for pay.[5]

The increase in wages among skilled labourers and lower-middle-class workers allowed for a far larger number of families to be able to support the entire family unit on one wage, and the breadwinner model became an attainable goal for a far wider proportion of society. Within this model, "The division of labour in parenting tasks can also be classified as 'caring about' (breadwinning) and 'caring for' (nurturing) children".[6]

Advantages

In the United Kingdom, the emergence of the breadwinner norm coincided with and helped to facilitate the removal of children from the workforce.[7] In 1821, approximately 49% of the nation's workforce was under the age of 20. Throughout the century, multiple items of legislation were written in to law limiting the age at which a child could enter work and ensuring mandatory standards of education.[8]

Historically, families that rely on the earning power of one parent have had a lower divorce rate than families where both parents are in gainful employment.[9] However, a lower divorce rate is not universally accepted as a positive facet of society. A primary reason women in domestic abuse situations choose not to divorce or report their spouses is economic dependence on their partner.[10] Marriages in a breadwinner economy may last longer or be less likely to end, but this may be an effect of the economically disadvantaged partner lacking the freedom to end a bad marriage.

Disadvantages

One associated disadvantage is that 'male breadwinner regimes make women dependent within marriage cohabitation especially when they have young children'.[11] In societies where the breadwinner model is present, it is common for the non-earner (predominantly women) to have broken career paths, providing unpaid labour to the family or working part-time. This contributes to the fact that, on average, women obtain lower levels of lifetime earnings than men.[11] This income disparity can often lead to an increase in financial insecurity or poverty – predominantly affecting women – if the relationship collapses. Another risk that has been identified with this has been a higher exposure to domestic violence, which has been associated with the non-earner's lack of independent resources.[11]

Since the US economy has evolved past the breadwinner economy, studies have examined the well-being of working mothers. Data spanning over 10 years showed that on average working mothers are happier than stay at home mothers, report better health and lower depression.[12]

Effect on gender identity

As breadwinning has been part of male identity in societies that have a breadwinner economy, people may continue to expect men to take on a breadwinner role, and some may be against women taking on the breadwinning role.[13] However, people in younger generations report less strict expectations gendered expectations for men to be a breadwinner. When surveyed, people in all generations report that it is more important that their spouse is a good partner or parent than that their partner is a breadwinner.[14]

Decline of the male breadwinner

In 2013 the UK female employment rate reached 67.2 per cent, the highest since the Office for National Statistics' records began.[15] As women's growing presence in the professional world has risen, as well as support for gender equality, male–female relations in the home have changed, especially the breadwinner paradigm.[16] The breadwinner model was most prevalent during the 20-year period directly after World War II. During this time, the economy relied heavily on men to financially support the family and to provide the main source of income, typically relying on women to stay at home and look after the children and undertaking domestic work. "Women's support for gender specialisation in marriage began to decline rapidly from the late 1970s through to the mid 1980s, this was followed by an interval of stability until the mid 1990s".[17] "As increasing proportions of women entered the paid labour market during the latter decades of the 20th century, the family model of a male breadwinner and female homemaker came under significant challenge both as a practice and an ideology".[18]

There is now agreement in most literature that the breadwinner model, in which men take primary responsibility for earning and women for the unpaid work of care, has been substantially eroded.[18][19]

The Nordic countries in particular have begun to adopt the dual-breadwinner model, with high employment rates among men and women, and a very small difference between men's and women's hours of work. With the exception of Denmark, research by the World Economic Forum has shown that all Nordic countries have closed over 80 percent of the gender gap.[20]

Breadwinner mothers

The female breadwinner model, otherwise known as "Breadwinner Moms",[21] takes place when the female provides the main source of income for the family. Recent data from the US Census stated that "40% of all households with children under the age of 18 include mothers who are either the sole or primary source of income for the family". 37%[22] of these "Breadwinner Moms"[21] are married mothers who have a higher income than their husbands, and 63%[22] are single mothers.

Concerns with the decline of the breadwinner model

The decline of the breadwinner model has been accompanied by an erosion of the economic support of family members and the "distribution of time and regulation of marriage and parenthood".[23] With two parents in the workforce, there is a risk that a job could undermine family life, consequently leading to relationship breakdown or adversely affecting original family formation.

While some evidence suggests that "women's gains on the economic front may be contributing to a decline in the formation and stability of marriages", one reason for this may be that women with greater earning and economic security have more freedom to leave abusive marriages. Another possibility could be that men are more hesitant to this change in social norms.[24]

Global variations

The ideal of the breadwinning model varies across the globe. In Norway, a country with strong gender equality ideology, the breadwinner model is less prevalent.[25] Second generation Pakistani immigrants living in Norway experience the effects of this equality and reinforce women's rights to paid work as opposed to the strict male centric ideologies that generations before them practiced.[25] In the United Kingdom, women's rates of employment decline after becoming a mother, and the male breadwinning model is still constant.[26]

In the United States during industrialization, nothing was more central to the American industrial order than the breadwinner ideal. It served to promote commerce while keeping it within proper bounds. The American Federation of Labor adopted a politics of male breadwinning. However, the North and South didn't agree on this new cultural ideal and it contributed to sectional political strife.[27]

Notes

  • Crompton, Rosemary (1999). Restructuring gender relations and employment: the decline of the male breadwinner. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198296089.
Book review: Fagan, Colette (March 2001). "Restructuring gender relations and employment: the decline of the male breadwinner (review)". Work, Employment & Society. Cambridge Journals. 15 (1): 195–212. doi:10.1017/S0950017001230104. JSTOR 23747792.
  • Creighton, Colin (September 1999). "The rise and decline of the 'male breadwinner family' in Britain". Cambridge Journal of Economics. Oxford Journals. 23 (5): 519–541. doi:10.1093/cje/23.5.519. JSTOR 23599633.
  • Cunningham, Mick (September 2008). "Changing attitudes toward the male breadwinner, female homemaker family model: Influences of women's employment and education over the lifecourse". Social Forces. Oxford Journals. 87 (1): 299–323. doi:10.1353/sof.0.0097. JSTOR 20430858. S2CID 144490888.
  • Nagla, Madhu (March 2008). "Male migration and emerging female headed families: Issues and challenges". Asian Women. Research Institute of Asian Women (RIAW). 24 (1): 1–23. doi:10.14431/aw.2008.03.24.1.1.
  • Dugan, Emily (19 February 2014). "Number of women in work in Britain hits record high - but figures show the gender pay gap is growing too". The Independent. Independent Print Limited. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  • World Economic Forum (2013). Insight Report: The Global Gender Gap Report 2013 (PDF) (Report). World Economic Forum, Switzerland. p. 103. Retrieved 19 October 2014.
  • Lewis, Jane (Summer 2001). "The decline of the male breadwinner model: The implications for work and care". Social Politics. Oxford Journals. 8 (2): 152–170. doi:10.1093/sp/8.2.152.
  • Osawa, Mari (Winter 2006). "The vicious cycle of the 'male breadwinner' model of livelihood security". Women's Asia 21: Voices from Japan. Asia-Japan Women's Resource Center. 16 (1): 1–5. Pdf.
  • Pascall, Gillian (2010), "Male breadwinner model", in Pascall, Gillian; et al. (eds.), International encyclopedia of social policy, London New York: Routledge, ISBN 9780415576949 Text.
  • Sayer, Liana C.; Bianchi, Suzanne M.; Robinson, John P. (July 2004). "Are parents investing less in children? Trends in mothers' and fathers' time with children". American Journal of Sociology. The University of Chicago Press. 110 (1): 1–43. doi:10.1086/386270. JSTOR 10.1086/386270. S2CID 141718530.
  • Thaler, Richard H. (1 June 2013). "Breadwinner wives and nervous husbands". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  • Pew Research Center (19 November 2010). The decline of marriage and rise of new families (Report). Pew Research Center. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  • Wang, Wendy; Parker, Kim; Taylor, Paul (29 May 2013). (PDF). Pew Research Center (Report). Washington, DC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 November 2014. Retrieved 1 November 2014.

References

  1. ^ "breadwinner". Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English. Pearson ELT.
  2. ^ "History 1700". faculty.weber.edu. Retrieved 2023-01-02.
  3. ^ Bjørnholt, Margunn (2014). "Changing men, changing times; fathers and sons from an experimental gender equality study" (PDF). The Sociological Review. 62 (2): 295–315. doi:10.1111/1467-954X.12156. S2CID 143048732.
  4. ^ Wang, Wendy (29 May 2013). "Breadwinner Moms". Pew Research Center Social & Demographic Trends. Retrieved 9 June 2017.
  5. ^ Seccombe, Wally (Jan 1986). "Patriarchy Stabilized: The Construction of the Male Breadwinner Wage Norm in Nineteenth-Century Britain". Social History. Taylor & Francis, Ltd. 11 (1): 53–76. doi:10.1080/03071028608567640. JSTOR 4285488.
  6. ^ Strange, Julie-Marie (December 2012). "Fatherhood, Providing and Attachment in Late Victorian and Edwardian Working-Class Families". The Historical Journal. Cambridge University Press. 55 (4): 1007–1027. doi:10.1017/s0018246x12000404. S2CID 144726797.
  7. ^ Seccombe
  8. ^ "Exhibitions | Citizenship | Struggle for democracy". The National Archives. Retrieved 2016-02-25.
  9. ^ D'Amico, Ronald (Jun 1983). "Status Maintenance or Status Competition? Wife's Relative Wages as a Determinant of Labor Supply and Marital Instability". Social Forces. Oxford University Press. 61 (4): 1186–1205. doi:10.2307/2578286. JSTOR 2578286.
  10. ^ Kaur, Ravneet; Garg, Suneela (April 2008). "Addressing Domestic Violence Against Women: An Unfinished Agenda". Indian Journal of Community Medicine. 33 (2): 73–76. doi:10.4103/0970-0218.40871. ISSN 0970-0218. PMC 2784629. PMID 19967027.
  11. ^ a b c Pascall, Gillian (2010), "Male breadwinner model", in Pascall, Gillian; et al. (eds.), International encyclopedia of social policy, London New York: Routledge, ISBN 9780415576949 Text.
  12. ^ www.apa.org https://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/2011/12/working-moms. Retrieved 2023-01-02. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  13. ^ Medved, Caryn E. (2016-07-02). "The new female breadwinner: discursively doing and un doing gender relations". Journal of Applied Communication Research. 44 (3): 236–255. doi:10.1080/00909882.2016.1192286. ISSN 0090-9882. S2CID 148367384.
  14. ^ Parker, Kim; Stepler, Renee. "Americans see men as the financial providers, even as women's contributions grow". Pew Research Center. Retrieved 2023-01-02.
  15. ^ Dugan, Emily (19 February 2014). "Number of women in work in Britain hits record high – but figures show the gender pay gap is growing too". The Independent. Independent Print Limited. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  16. ^ Crompton, Rosemary (1999). Restructuring gender relations and employment: the decline of the male breadwinner. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198296089.
  17. ^ Cunningham, Mick (September 2008). "Changing attitudes toward the male breadwinner, female homemaker family model: Influences of women's employment and education over the lifecourse". Social Forces. Oxford Journals. 87 (1): 299–323. doi:10.1353/sof.0.0097. JSTOR 20430858. S2CID 144490888.
  18. ^ a b Sayer, Liana C.; Bianchi, Suzanne M.; Robinson, John P. (July 2004). "Are parents investing less in children? Trends in mothers' and fathers' time with children". American Journal of Sociology. The University of Chicago Press. 110 (1): 1–43. doi:10.1086/386270. JSTOR 10.1086/386270. S2CID 141718530.
  19. ^ Lewis, Jane (Summer 2001). "The decline of the male breadwinner model: The implications for work and care". Social Politics. Oxford Journals. 8 (2): 152–170. doi:10.1093/sp/8.2.152.
  20. ^ World Economic Forum (2013). Insight Report: The Global Gender Gap Report 2013 (PDF) (Report). World Economic Forum, Switzerland. p. 103. Retrieved 19 October 2014.
  21. ^ a b Wang, Wendy; Parker, Kim; Taylor, Paul (29 May 2013). (PDF). Pew Research Center (Report). Washington, DC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 November 2014. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
  22. ^ a b Pew Research Center (19 November 2010). The decline of marriage and rise of new families (Report). Pew Research Center. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  23. ^ Creighton, Colin (September 1999). "The rise and decline of the 'male breadwinner family' in Britain". Cambridge Journal of Economics. Oxford Journals. 23 (5): 519–541. doi:10.1093/cje/23.5.519. JSTOR 23599633.
  24. ^ Thaler, Richard H. (1 June 2013). "Breadwinner wives and nervous husbands". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  25. ^ a b Marjan Nadim (February 2016). "Undermining the Male Breadwinner Ideal? Understandings of Women's Paid Work among Second-Generation Immigrants in Norway". Sociology. 50 (1): 109–124. doi:10.1177/0038038514560259. hdl:11250/2561247. S2CID 55690788.
  26. ^ Boje, Thomas P. (July 2007). "Welfare and work. The gendered organisation of work and care in different European Countries". European Review. 15 (3): 373–395. doi:10.1017/S1062798707000361. ISSN 1474-0575. S2CID 143926974.
  27. ^ Levy, Jonathan (2021). Ages of American capitalism: a history of the United States. New York. ISBN 978-0-8129-9502-2. OCLC 1162599712.

breadwinner, model, breadwinner, redirects, here, other, uses, breadwinner, disambiguation, breadwinner, model, paradigm, family, centered, breadwinner, member, family, earns, money, support, others, traditionally, earner, works, outside, home, provide, family. Breadwinner redirects here For other uses see Breadwinner disambiguation The breadwinner model is a paradigm of family centered on a breadwinner the member of a family who earns the money to support the others 1 Traditionally the earner works outside the home to provide the family with income and benefits such as health insurance while the non earner stays at home and takes care of children and the elderly The breadwinner model largely arose in western cultures after industrialization occurred Before industrialization all members of the household including men women and children contributed to the productivity of the household Gender roles underwent a re definition as a result of industrialization with a split between public and private roles for men and women which did not exist before industrialization 2 Since the 1950s social scientists and feminist theorists such as Germaine Greer have increasingly criticized the gendered division of work and care and the expectation that the breadwinner role should be fulfilled by men Norwegian government policy has increasingly targeted men as fathers as a tool of changing gender relations 3 Recent years have seen a shift in gender norms for the breadwinner role in the U S A 2013 Pew Research study found that women were the sole or primary breadwinners in 40 of heterosexual relationships with children 4 Contents 1 Rise 2 Advantages 3 Disadvantages 3 1 Effect on gender identity 4 Decline of the male breadwinner 5 Breadwinner mothers 6 Concerns with the decline of the breadwinner model 7 Global variations 8 Notes 9 ReferencesRise EditIn Britain the breadwinner model developed among the emerging middle class towards the end of the industrial revolution in the mid nineteenth century Prior to this in low income families a subsistence wage was paid on the basis of the individual worker s output with all members of the family expected to contribute to the household upkeep There was another side to the transformation of wage relations in mid 19th century Britain involving two closely related changes first a shift in the prevailing wage form from a joint to an individual payment and second a shift in the predominant subsistence norm of a living wage from a family group s income to the ideal of an adult male breadwinner wage This is the notion that the wage earned by a husband ought to be sufficient to support his family without his wife and young children having to work for pay 5 The increase in wages among skilled labourers and lower middle class workers allowed for a far larger number of families to be able to support the entire family unit on one wage and the breadwinner model became an attainable goal for a far wider proportion of society Within this model The division of labour in parenting tasks can also be classified as caring about breadwinning and caring for nurturing children 6 Advantages EditIn the United Kingdom the emergence of the breadwinner norm coincided with and helped to facilitate the removal of children from the workforce 7 In 1821 approximately 49 of the nation s workforce was under the age of 20 Throughout the century multiple items of legislation were written in to law limiting the age at which a child could enter work and ensuring mandatory standards of education 8 Historically families that rely on the earning power of one parent have had a lower divorce rate than families where both parents are in gainful employment 9 However a lower divorce rate is not universally accepted as a positive facet of society A primary reason women in domestic abuse situations choose not to divorce or report their spouses is economic dependence on their partner 10 Marriages in a breadwinner economy may last longer or be less likely to end but this may be an effect of the economically disadvantaged partner lacking the freedom to end a bad marriage Disadvantages EditOne associated disadvantage is that male breadwinner regimes make women dependent within marriage cohabitation especially when they have young children 11 In societies where the breadwinner model is present it is common for the non earner predominantly women to have broken career paths providing unpaid labour to the family or working part time This contributes to the fact that on average women obtain lower levels of lifetime earnings than men 11 This income disparity can often lead to an increase in financial insecurity or poverty predominantly affecting women if the relationship collapses Another risk that has been identified with this has been a higher exposure to domestic violence which has been associated with the non earner s lack of independent resources 11 Since the US economy has evolved past the breadwinner economy studies have examined the well being of working mothers Data spanning over 10 years showed that on average working mothers are happier than stay at home mothers report better health and lower depression 12 Effect on gender identity Edit As breadwinning has been part of male identity in societies that have a breadwinner economy people may continue to expect men to take on a breadwinner role and some may be against women taking on the breadwinning role 13 However people in younger generations report less strict expectations gendered expectations for men to be a breadwinner When surveyed people in all generations report that it is more important that their spouse is a good partner or parent than that their partner is a breadwinner 14 Decline of the male breadwinner EditIn 2013 the UK female employment rate reached 67 2 per cent the highest since the Office for National Statistics records began 15 As women s growing presence in the professional world has risen as well as support for gender equality male female relations in the home have changed especially the breadwinner paradigm 16 The breadwinner model was most prevalent during the 20 year period directly after World War II During this time the economy relied heavily on men to financially support the family and to provide the main source of income typically relying on women to stay at home and look after the children and undertaking domestic work Women s support for gender specialisation in marriage began to decline rapidly from the late 1970s through to the mid 1980s this was followed by an interval of stability until the mid 1990s 17 As increasing proportions of women entered the paid labour market during the latter decades of the 20th century the family model of a male breadwinner and female homemaker came under significant challenge both as a practice and an ideology 18 There is now agreement in most literature that the breadwinner model in which men take primary responsibility for earning and women for the unpaid work of care has been substantially eroded 18 19 The Nordic countries in particular have begun to adopt the dual breadwinner model with high employment rates among men and women and a very small difference between men s and women s hours of work With the exception of Denmark research by the World Economic Forum has shown that all Nordic countries have closed over 80 percent of the gender gap 20 Breadwinner mothers EditThe female breadwinner model otherwise known as Breadwinner Moms 21 takes place when the female provides the main source of income for the family Recent data from the US Census stated that 40 of all households with children under the age of 18 include mothers who are either the sole or primary source of income for the family 37 22 of these Breadwinner Moms 21 are married mothers who have a higher income than their husbands and 63 22 are single mothers Concerns with the decline of the breadwinner model EditThe decline of the breadwinner model has been accompanied by an erosion of the economic support of family members and the distribution of time and regulation of marriage and parenthood 23 With two parents in the workforce there is a risk that a job could undermine family life consequently leading to relationship breakdown or adversely affecting original family formation While some evidence suggests that women s gains on the economic front may be contributing to a decline in the formation and stability of marriages one reason for this may be that women with greater earning and economic security have more freedom to leave abusive marriages Another possibility could be that men are more hesitant to this change in social norms 24 Global variations EditThe ideal of the breadwinning model varies across the globe In Norway a country with strong gender equality ideology the breadwinner model is less prevalent 25 Second generation Pakistani immigrants living in Norway experience the effects of this equality and reinforce women s rights to paid work as opposed to the strict male centric ideologies that generations before them practiced 25 In the United Kingdom women s rates of employment decline after becoming a mother and the male breadwinning model is still constant 26 In the United States during industrialization nothing was more central to the American industrial order than the breadwinner ideal It served to promote commerce while keeping it within proper bounds The American Federation of Labor adopted a politics of male breadwinning However the North and South didn t agree on this new cultural ideal and it contributed to sectional political strife 27 Notes EditCrompton Rosemary 1999 Restructuring gender relations and employment the decline of the male breadwinner Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198296089 Book review Fagan Colette March 2001 Restructuring gender relations and employment the decline of the male breadwinner review Work Employment amp Society Cambridge Journals 15 1 195 212 doi 10 1017 S0950017001230104 JSTOR 23747792 dd Creighton Colin September 1999 The rise and decline of the male breadwinner family in Britain Cambridge Journal of Economics Oxford Journals 23 5 519 541 doi 10 1093 cje 23 5 519 JSTOR 23599633 Cunningham Mick September 2008 Changing attitudes toward the male breadwinner female homemaker family model Influences of women s employment and education over the lifecourse Social Forces Oxford Journals 87 1 299 323 doi 10 1353 sof 0 0097 JSTOR 20430858 S2CID 144490888 Nagla Madhu March 2008 Male migration and emerging female headed families Issues and challenges Asian Women Research Institute of Asian Women RIAW 24 1 1 23 doi 10 14431 aw 2008 03 24 1 1 Dugan Emily 19 February 2014 Number of women in work in Britain hits record high but figures show the gender pay gap is growing too The Independent Independent Print Limited Retrieved 30 October 2014 World Economic Forum 2013 Insight Report The Global Gender Gap Report 2013 PDF Report World Economic Forum Switzerland p 103 Retrieved 19 October 2014 Lewis Jane Summer 2001 The decline of the male breadwinner model The implications for work and care Social Politics Oxford Journals 8 2 152 170 doi 10 1093 sp 8 2 152 Osawa Mari Winter 2006 The vicious cycle of the male breadwinner model of livelihood security Women s Asia 21 Voices from Japan Asia Japan Women s Resource Center 16 1 1 5 Pdf Pascall Gillian 2010 Male breadwinner model in Pascall Gillian et al eds International encyclopedia of social policy London New York Routledge ISBN 9780415576949 Text Sayer Liana C Bianchi Suzanne M Robinson John P July 2004 Are parents investing less in children Trends in mothers and fathers time with children American Journal of Sociology The University of Chicago Press 110 1 1 43 doi 10 1086 386270 JSTOR 10 1086 386270 S2CID 141718530 Thaler Richard H 1 June 2013 Breadwinner wives and nervous husbands The New York Times Retrieved 18 October 2014 Pew Research Center 19 November 2010 The decline of marriage and rise of new families Report Pew Research Center Retrieved 18 October 2014 Wang Wendy Parker Kim Taylor Paul 29 May 2013 Breadwinner moms mothers are the sole or primary provider in four in ten households with children Public conflicted about the growing trend PDF Pew Research Center Report Washington DC Archived from the original PDF on 6 November 2014 Retrieved 1 November 2014 References Edit breadwinner Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Pearson ELT History 1700 faculty weber edu Retrieved 2023 01 02 Bjornholt Margunn 2014 Changing men changing times fathers and sons from an experimental gender equality study PDF The Sociological Review 62 2 295 315 doi 10 1111 1467 954X 12156 S2CID 143048732 Wang Wendy 29 May 2013 Breadwinner Moms Pew Research Center Social amp Demographic Trends Retrieved 9 June 2017 Seccombe Wally Jan 1986 Patriarchy Stabilized The Construction of the Male Breadwinner Wage Norm in Nineteenth Century Britain Social History Taylor amp Francis Ltd 11 1 53 76 doi 10 1080 03071028608567640 JSTOR 4285488 Strange Julie Marie December 2012 Fatherhood Providing and Attachment in Late Victorian and Edwardian Working Class Families The Historical Journal Cambridge University Press 55 4 1007 1027 doi 10 1017 s0018246x12000404 S2CID 144726797 Seccombe Exhibitions Citizenship Struggle for democracy The National Archives Retrieved 2016 02 25 D Amico Ronald Jun 1983 Status Maintenance or Status Competition Wife s Relative Wages as a Determinant of Labor Supply and Marital Instability Social Forces Oxford University Press 61 4 1186 1205 doi 10 2307 2578286 JSTOR 2578286 Kaur Ravneet Garg Suneela April 2008 Addressing Domestic Violence Against Women An Unfinished Agenda Indian Journal of Community Medicine 33 2 73 76 doi 10 4103 0970 0218 40871 ISSN 0970 0218 PMC 2784629 PMID 19967027 a b c Pascall Gillian 2010 Male breadwinner model in Pascall Gillian et al eds International encyclopedia of social policy London New York Routledge ISBN 9780415576949 Text www apa org https www apa org news press releases 2011 12 working moms Retrieved 2023 01 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Medved Caryn E 2016 07 02 The new female breadwinner discursively doing and un doing gender relations Journal of Applied Communication Research 44 3 236 255 doi 10 1080 00909882 2016 1192286 ISSN 0090 9882 S2CID 148367384 Parker Kim Stepler Renee Americans see men as the financial providers even as women s contributions grow Pew Research Center Retrieved 2023 01 02 Dugan Emily 19 February 2014 Number of women in work in Britain hits record high but figures show the gender pay gap is growing too The Independent Independent Print Limited Retrieved 30 October 2014 Crompton Rosemary 1999 Restructuring gender relations and employment the decline of the male breadwinner Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198296089 Cunningham Mick September 2008 Changing attitudes toward the male breadwinner female homemaker family model Influences of women s employment and education over the lifecourse Social Forces Oxford Journals 87 1 299 323 doi 10 1353 sof 0 0097 JSTOR 20430858 S2CID 144490888 a b Sayer Liana C Bianchi Suzanne M Robinson John P July 2004 Are parents investing less in children Trends in mothers and fathers time with children American Journal of Sociology The University of Chicago Press 110 1 1 43 doi 10 1086 386270 JSTOR 10 1086 386270 S2CID 141718530 Lewis Jane Summer 2001 The decline of the male breadwinner model The implications for work and care Social Politics Oxford Journals 8 2 152 170 doi 10 1093 sp 8 2 152 World Economic Forum 2013 Insight Report The Global Gender Gap Report 2013 PDF Report World Economic Forum Switzerland p 103 Retrieved 19 October 2014 a b Wang Wendy Parker Kim Taylor Paul 29 May 2013 Breadwinner moms mothers are the sole or primary provider in four in ten households with children Public conflicted about the growing trend PDF Pew Research Center Report Washington DC Archived from the original PDF on 6 November 2014 Retrieved 1 November 2014 a b Pew Research Center 19 November 2010 The decline of marriage and rise of new families Report Pew Research Center Retrieved 18 October 2014 Creighton Colin September 1999 The rise and decline of the male breadwinner family in Britain Cambridge Journal of Economics Oxford Journals 23 5 519 541 doi 10 1093 cje 23 5 519 JSTOR 23599633 Thaler Richard H 1 June 2013 Breadwinner wives and nervous husbands The New York Times Retrieved 18 October 2014 a b Marjan Nadim February 2016 Undermining the Male Breadwinner Ideal Understandings of Women s Paid Work among Second Generation Immigrants in Norway Sociology 50 1 109 124 doi 10 1177 0038038514560259 hdl 11250 2561247 S2CID 55690788 Boje Thomas P July 2007 Welfare and work The gendered organisation of work and care in different European Countries European Review 15 3 373 395 doi 10 1017 S1062798707000361 ISSN 1474 0575 S2CID 143926974 Levy Jonathan 2021 Ages of American capitalism a history of the United States New York ISBN 978 0 8129 9502 2 OCLC 1162599712 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Breadwinner model amp oldid 1135758994, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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