Comparing the Childrearing Lifetimes of Britain's Divorce-Revolution Men and Women |
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Authors: | Michael S. Rendall Heather Joshi Jeungil Oh Georgia Verropoulou |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Sociology and Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, 601 Oswald Tower, University Park, PA, 16802-6211, USA (author for correspondence, e-mail;(2) Centre for Longitudinal Studies, Institute of Education, University of London, UK;(3) Department of Policy Analysis and Management, Cornell University, UK |
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Abstract: | British men and women who became parents in the 1960s and 1970s were about to experience a new regime of marital instability. The effect of this on the balance between men's and women's contributions to childrearing is potentially very large. This study estimates the co-residential foundations of the new gender balance, focusing on the measurement of lifetime number of years of living with dependent-aged children. A variant of the family-status life table is used to combine two data sources: census panel observations of family status across three points ten years apart, and survey data on the years between censuses. One-quarter of women who became parents in the 1960s, and one-third of women who became parents in the 1970s, have been or will be a lone mother at some point. Lone parenthood is the main way in which women's childrearing lifetimes differ from men's, with seven and eight years respectively of lone motherhood per ever-lone-mother of the 1960s and 1970s parenting cohorts. Men's lone-father years and greater numbers of years spent in second families together provide an average of two years offset against women's lone mother years. |
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Keywords: | British family change childrearing divorce gender inequality life-course simulation lone motherhood |
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