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  1. Labor Markets, Breadwinning, and Beliefs: How Economic Context Shapes Men's Gender Ideology.Sarah Thébaud & Youngjoo Cha - 2009 - Gender and Society 23 (2):215-243.
    Abundant research has found that men's economic status shapes their gender ideology such that men who are breadwinners are less likely to endorse egalitarian ideology than men in nontraditional arrangements. This article investigates how the association between men's breadwinning status and gender ideology is influenced by the institutional arrangements of different types of labor markets. Rigid labor markets support men's ability to be breadwinners in the long term, whereas flexible labor markets provide men with more frequent, but less permanent, experiences (...)
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  • Men's and women's beliefs about gender and sexuality.Mimi Schippers & Emily W. Kane - 1996 - Gender and Society 10 (5):650-665.
    Feminist scholarship highlighting the importance of sexuality suggests the utility of studying beliefs about gender and sexuality, but the public opinion literature on gender-related attitudes has paid almost no attention to this issue. This research report addresses U.S. men's and women's beliefs about several aspects of sexuality: gender differences in sexual drives, gender inequalities in sexual power, and sexual orientation. The results suggest that men and women tend to share similar beliefs about sexual drives and sexual orientation but disagree notably (...)
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  • National context and gender ideology: Attitudes toward women's employment in hungary and the united states.April Brayfield & Evelina Panayotova - 1997 - Gender and Society 11 (5):627-655.
    This study uses a comparative framework to examine the relationship between individual-level attributes and gender-role attitudes in a state-market society and in a capitalist society. Data from the 1988 International Social Science Program indicate significant differences in attitudes between the two populations. Both women and men in the United States were more supportive of women's employment than their counterparts in Hungary, despite the Hungarian government's policy of full employment during communist rule. Nevertheless, the level of agreement between women and men (...)
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