A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Domestic responsibilities as predictors of labour market attachment trajectories in men and women




AuthorsLaura Peutere, Päivi Rautava, Pekka Virtanen

PublisherEMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD

Publication year2017

JournalInternational Journal of Sociology and Social Policy

Journal name in sourceINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY AND SOCIAL POLICY

Journal acronymINT J SOCIOL SOC POL

Volume37

Issue9-10

First page 536

Last page554

Number of pages19

ISSN0144-333X

eISSN1758-6720

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1108/IJSSP-04-2016-0039


Abstract
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to analyse whether high responsibility for housework or childcare is related to weak labour market attachment.Design/methodology/approach - Survey data on domestic responsibilities in 1998 and 2003 were linked to register data on respondents' employment spells for 2004-2011. Effects of the responsibilities on labour market trajectories - identified with latent class growth analyses - were analysed with multinomial logistic regression analyses.Findings - Four trajectories for labour market attachment were identified among both genders. When adjusted for prior labour market attachment and other control variables, a high responsibility for housework predicted weak labour market attachment, compared to the trajectory of strong attachment, only among men. Compared to the trajectory of strengthening attachment, a high responsibility for housework was related to weak attachment among both men and women.Research limitations/implications - Personal orientations may, to some extent, explain both the division on domestic responsibilities and attachment to the labour market. In the Finnish type of welfare state, domestic responsibilities have long-term effects, especially on men's careers. More attention should be given to men's roles in families and their possible consequences.Originality/value - This is the first study analysing the division of domestic responsibilities on later labour market attachment among both genders. The strength of this study is the long follow-up time and methodology; it combines survey data at two time points and register data on employment spells over eight years, identifying patterns in employment with latent class growth analyses.



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