Parsons argues that the
gender division of labour is
functional for the family as
it is biologically based.
Bott talks about the
segregated and conjugal roles
segregated - sharp division between
the male breadwinner and the female
homemaker and they spend their
leisure time separately
conjugal - involves couples sharing
domestic tasks and leisure time
Willmott and Young talk about
the symmetrical family where
roles are similar and more equal.
There are trends to support this claim, for example; more
women now go out to work, men help with housework
and childcare (new man), and couples spend their leisure
time together and men have become more home
centred and the family has become more privatised.
This is because of higher living standards,
labour saving devices, better housing,
women working and smaller families.
Feminist view
Feminists reject the March of Progess view as
suggested by Young and Willmott and they
see the family as being patriarchal, not
symmetrical and equal.
Oakley found not evidence of symmetry,
she found that men did help, but it was far
from equal.
Boulton argues that we need to look who is
responsible for the tasks and not just who
performs them.
Women carry a dual burden and a triple
shift - this was said by Duncombe and
Marsden
Braun et al found most fathers were
background fathers, they held a
provider ideology and are always the
breadwinner, not the primary carer.
Explaining the gender division of labour
1. the cultural or ideological explanantion
Patriarchal cultural
norms shape gender
roles, women perform
more domestic labour
because this is what
society expects and has
socialised them to do.
Equality will only be achieved
when attitudes, values and
expectations, role models and
socialisation change.
Gershuny argues that couples
are adapting to women
working full time establishing
a new norm for men doing
more domestic work.
Kan found that younger
males do more domestic
work
2. the material or
economic explanation
women earn less than
men so it is
economically rational
for them to do more
domestic labour whilst
men spend more time
making money.
If women earn as
much as their
partners we should
see couples doing
equal amounts of
domestic work.
Arber and Ginn found better paid
women could buy in products and
services e.g childcare rather than
carrying out the domestic tasks
themselves.
Ramos found that where the woman
is the full time breadwinner and the
man is unemployed they do equal
amounts of domestic labour.