A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Labor and Love: Wives' Employment and Divorce Risk in its Socio-Political Context




AuthorsCooke LP, Erola J, Evertsson M, Gähler M, Härkönen J, Hewitt B, Jalovaara M, Kan M, Lyngstad TH, Mencarini L, Mignot J, Mortelmans D, Poortman A, Schmitt C, Trappe H

Publication year2013

JournalSocial Politics

Journal name in sourceSocial Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society

Number in series4

Volume20

Issue4

First page 482

Last page509

Number of pages28

ISSN1072-4745

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1093/sp/jxt016(external)

Web address http://sp.oxfordjournals.org/content/20/4/482.abstract(external)


Abstract
We theorize how social policy affects marital stability vis-à-vis macro and micro effects of wives' employment on divorce risk in 11 Western countries. Correlations among 1990s aggregate data on marriage, divorce, and wives' employment rates, along with attitudinal and social policy information, seem to support specialization hypotheses that divorce rates are higher where more wives are employed and where policies support that employment. This is an ecological fallacy, however, because of the nature of the changes in specific countries. At the micro level, we harmonize national longitudinal data on the most recent cohort of wives marrying for the first time and find that the stabilizing effects of a gendered division of labor have ebbed. In the United States with its lack of policy support, a wife's employment still significantly increases the risk of divorce. A wife's employment has no significant effect on divorce risk in Australia, Flanders, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom. In Finland, Norway, and Sweden, wives' employment predicts a significantly lower risk of divorce when compared with wives who are out of the labor force. The results indicate that greater policy support for equality reduces and may even reverse the relative divorce risk associated with a wife's employment.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 13:49