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Journal ArticleDOI

Cohabitation and Housework: The Effects of Marital Intentions

Teresa Ciabattari
- 01 Feb 2004 - 
- Vol. 66, Iss: 1, pp 118-125
TLDR
This paper found that men who are least committed to their relationships spend the least time on homework, whereas women's housework time is not affected by marital intentions, and that cohabiters who are more invested in their relationships will spend more time on housework.
Abstract
This study asks how cohabiters' housework patterns vary by their marital intentions. I draw on interactionist theories that view housework as an activity that produces gender and family to hypothesize that cohabiters who are more invested in their relationships will spend more time on housework. Analyzing the 1987-1988 National Survey of Families and Households (N = 348), I find that, controlling for sociodemographic and household differences, men who are least committed to their relationships spend the least time on homework, whereas women's housework time is not affected by marital intentions. Key Words: cohabitation, division of household labor, gender inequality, housework. Cohabitation has become an increasingly common living arrangement in the United States. The 2000 Census (U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2001) counted 5.5 million unmarried heterosexual couples sharing a household; in 1990, there were only 2.9 million (U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2000). In addition to couples who are currently cohabiting, many have cohabited sometime in the past. In fact, the majority of marriages in the United States, both first marriages and remarriages, now begin with cohabitation (Smock, 2000). For most couples, cohabitation is a relatively short-term arrangement, with about 55% of cohabiting couples marrying and 40% dissolving within 5 years (Bumpass & Lu, 2000). These dissolution rates, however, vary by race; African Americans are more likely than Whites to cohabit as a long-term alternative to marriage (Brown, 2000). Most research on cohabitation tends to study its patterns and characteristics primarily in relationship to marriage, and much of this research fails to acknowledge differences among cohabiters. For example, Nock (1995) finds that compared to married couples, cohabiters tend to express lower levels of relationship commitment, less relationship satisfaction, and poor quality relations with kin. Brown and Booth (1996), however, find that these differences exist only among cohabiting couples who do not plan to marry their partners. Those who do plan to marry their partners have relationships that look very similar to those of married couples. Similar to the research on relationship quality, research on housework patterns in cohabitation tends to compare cohabiters with married couples without considering differences among cohabiters (Bianchi, Milkie, Sayer, & Robinson, 2000; Shelton & John, 1993; South & Spitze, 1994). In this article, I revisit the research on cohabitation and housework and ask how cohabiters' marital intentions affect the division of household labor. I find preliminary evidence that cohabiting men who are less invested in their relationships spend less time on housework than men who are more invested, while marital intentions have no effect on cohabiting women's housework time. COHABITATION AND HOUSEWORK The research on housework among cohabiters has found two consistent patterns. First, cohabiting women tend to spend less time on housework than married women, about 5 to 6 fewer hours per week (Bianchi et al., 2000; Shelton & John, 1993). This difference persists even after compositional differences, such as the presence of children and employment hours, have been controlled. The second pattern is that even though cohabiting women are spending less time on housework than married women are, they are spending more time than cohabiting men (Gupta, 1999; Shelton & John; South & Spitze, 1994). Gupta finds that in transitioning to and from coresidential unions (cohabitation or marriage), women increase their housework hours when they move in with men and decrease them when they move out, whereas the opposite pattern holds for men. Thus, although the gender gap in housework is smaller in cohabitation than in marriage, it does persist. Several explanations for these patterns have been offered, some of which may account for differences in housework patterns within cohabitation across marital intentions. …

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Why Do Women Do the Lion’s Share of Housework? A Decade of Research

TL;DR: This paper reviewed the state of research on the division of household labor published between 2000 and 2009 and reviewed empirical findings that support or challenge the micro-and macro-level perspectives that have been proposed to explain the gendered allocation of labor.
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Sliding Versus Deciding: Inertia and the Premarital Cohabitation Effect.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an empirically based view of how the experience of cohabitation may increase risk for relationship distress or divorce for some people beyond what is accounted for by selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Union Type on Division of Household Labor: Do Cohabiting Men Really Perform More Housework?

TL;DR: This paper used multilevel modeling to compare the reported division of household labor and factors affecting it for currently married and currently cohabiting couples, and found that gender ideology was more influential on the division of labor reported by co-habiting than by married respondents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding Diversity in the Meaning of Cohabitation Across Europe

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the diversity in the meanings attached to cohabitation across Europe, using a sample of 9,113 cohabiters between ages 18 and 79 from 10 European countries that participated in the Generations and Gender Surveys.
Journal ArticleDOI

Waiting to Be Asked: Gender, Power, and Relationship Progression Among Cohabiting Couples

TL;DR: The findings suggest that adherence to conventional gender practices even among those residing in informal unions perpetuates women’s secondary position in intimate relationships.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Is Anyone Doing the Housework? Trends in the Gender Division of Household Labor

TL;DR: The authors found that the number of hours of domestic labor has continued to decline steadily and predictably since 1965, mainly due to dramatic declines among women, who have cut their housework hours almost in half since the 1960s.
Journal ArticleDOI

Economic Dependency, Gender, and the Division of Labor at Home

TL;DR: This paper found that the more a husband relies on his wife for economic support, the less housework he does, and that by doing less household chores, economically dependent husbands also become "dogender."
Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in cohabitation and implications for children s family contexts in the United States

TL;DR: In the United States, the proportion of births to unmarried women born into cohabiting families increased from 29 to 39 per cent in the period 1980-84 to 1990-94, accounting for almost all of the increase in unmarried childbearing as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Remarriage as an Incomplete Institution

TL;DR: In this paper, it is argued that the higher divorce rate for remarriages after divorce than for first marriages is due to the incomplete institutionalization of remarriage after divorce in the United States.

The design and content of the National Survey of Families and Households.

TL;DR: The cross-sectional design permits the detailed description of past and current living arrangements and other characteristics and experiences and the analysis of the consequences of earlier patterns on current states marital and parenting relationships kin contact and economic and psychological well-being.
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