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Sliding into a Gendered Division of Labour

Furgler, Selina LU (2019) WPMM42 20191
Sociology
School of Social Work
Department of Sociology
Abstract
In Switzerland the one-and-a-half-earner model where the father is the primary wage-earner working full-time and the woman is the secondary wage-earner working part-time while taking over the majority of care and housework responsibilities is predominant. This is discussed criti-cally as the normative and institutional context incentivises parents to adopt a division of labour that disadvantages women in terms of economic vulnerability and social recognition. The aim of this study is to examine the decision-making process of highly educated Swiss couples that has led them to adopt a gendered division of labour. Joint in-depth interviews were conducted and analysed inductively. It is shown that the interviewed couples take many decisions... (More)
In Switzerland the one-and-a-half-earner model where the father is the primary wage-earner working full-time and the woman is the secondary wage-earner working part-time while taking over the majority of care and housework responsibilities is predominant. This is discussed criti-cally as the normative and institutional context incentivises parents to adopt a division of labour that disadvantages women in terms of economic vulnerability and social recognition. The aim of this study is to examine the decision-making process of highly educated Swiss couples that has led them to adopt a gendered division of labour. Joint in-depth interviews were conducted and analysed inductively. It is shown that the interviewed couples take many decisions implicitly and focus on short-term and incremental decision-making. This enables them to handle the great num-ber of decisions at hand and allows them to avoid conflict and uncertain outcomes. However, by agreeing on things implicitly, much room for the influence of prevalent gendered norms and institutions on the division of paid and unpaid work is left. By using the concept of the gendered master status (Krüger and Levy 2000, 2001), it is demonstrated how gendered differences in women’s and men’s life paths are reinforced in the transition to parenthood. The limited aware-ness of the influence of the underlying gender structures on their division of work can partly explain why the couples do not feel very constrained in their choice of a family and work model. Additionally, the costs of countering norms and institutions in order to live in a more gender equal model are sometimes rated as excessive. This leads couples to accept the fact that the goals of being a good parent and a good employee are not compatible. It is discussed how such constraints can be reduced. Finally, the problem is addressed that by focusing on short-term and objective decisions, couples tend to only marginally include more abstract long-term consequences of the one-and-a-half-earner model. (Less)
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author
Furgler, Selina LU
supervisor
organization
alternative title
Swiss Couples' Decision-Making Process of Dividing Paid and Unpaid Work
course
WPMM42 20191
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
division of labour, gender equality, family policy, couples’ decision-making, gendered master status, transition to parenthood, part-time work
language
English
id
8988876
date added to LUP
2019-06-28 10:16:56
date last changed
2019-06-28 10:16:56
@misc{8988876,
  abstract     = {{In Switzerland the one-and-a-half-earner model where the father is the primary wage-earner working full-time and the woman is the secondary wage-earner working part-time while taking over the majority of care and housework responsibilities is predominant. This is discussed criti-cally as the normative and institutional context incentivises parents to adopt a division of labour that disadvantages women in terms of economic vulnerability and social recognition. The aim of this study is to examine the decision-making process of highly educated Swiss couples that has led them to adopt a gendered division of labour. Joint in-depth interviews were conducted and analysed inductively. It is shown that the interviewed couples take many decisions implicitly and focus on short-term and incremental decision-making. This enables them to handle the great num-ber of decisions at hand and allows them to avoid conflict and uncertain outcomes. However, by agreeing on things implicitly, much room for the influence of prevalent gendered norms and institutions on the division of paid and unpaid work is left. By using the concept of the gendered master status (Krüger and Levy 2000, 2001), it is demonstrated how gendered differences in women’s and men’s life paths are reinforced in the transition to parenthood. The limited aware-ness of the influence of the underlying gender structures on their division of work can partly explain why the couples do not feel very constrained in their choice of a family and work model. Additionally, the costs of countering norms and institutions in order to live in a more gender equal model are sometimes rated as excessive. This leads couples to accept the fact that the goals of being a good parent and a good employee are not compatible. It is discussed how such constraints can be reduced. Finally, the problem is addressed that by focusing on short-term and objective decisions, couples tend to only marginally include more abstract long-term consequences of the one-and-a-half-earner model.}},
  author       = {{Furgler, Selina}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Sliding into a Gendered Division of Labour}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}