38 results on '"Natalia Sarkisian"'
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2. Book Review: Intersectionality as Critical Social Theory By Patricia Hill Collins
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Natalia Sarkisian
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Gender Studies ,Intersectionality ,Sociology and Political Science ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Critical theory ,Gender studies ,Sociology - Published
- 2020
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3. Siblings Caring for Their Parents Across Europe: Gender in Cross-National Perspective
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Naomi Gerstel and Natalia Sarkisian
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Eastern european ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Social environment ,Demographic economics ,Welfare state ,Sociology ,Sibling ,Welfare ,Division of labour ,Democracy ,media_common ,Cross national - Abstract
After spouses, children, especially daughters, are the most common source of elder care. We focus on sibling sets to examine the gender gap in caregiving labor for parents in a range of European countries. Using Survey of Health, Ageing, and Retirement (SHARE) Wave 6 (2015) data, we examine how brothers and sisters divide care, how that division varies across four welfare regimes—Social Democratic, Christian Democratic, Mediterranean, and Eastern European, and what social factors shape this division of labor. We examine separately any care provided by non-resident adult children as well as more intense, at least weekly care provided by either coresident or non-coresident children. We control for a wide range of child, sibship set, and parental characteristics and show, first, that daughters are more likely than sons to provide care of any frequency/intensity in Christian Democratic and Mediterranean countries, while there is no significant gender gap in Eastern European countries and even a gap favoring sons in the Social Democratic cluster. Second, examining frequent/intense care, we find that daughters are more likely to provide such care than sons in Christian Democratic, Mediterranean, and Eastern European countries, while the gender gap is non-significant in Social Democratic countries. Welfare regime explains most of the cross-national variation in gender gaps in intense care, highlighting the value of the welfare regime framework in studying gender gaps in caregiving. Cross-national variation in sibling division of caregiving labour demonstrates the power of social context to shape what some previously argued is an essential/invariant gender divide.
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- 2020
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4. Analysis of Adverse Events Associated With Adult Moderate Procedural Sedation Outside the Operating Room
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Wendy L. Gross, Richard D. Urman, Rebecca L. Grammer, Sergey Karamnov, and Natalia Sarkisian
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Adult ,Male ,Operating Rooms ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Leadership and Management ,Sedation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Conscious Sedation ,Hypoxemia ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Intubation ,Anesthesia ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Young adult ,Adverse effect ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Retrospective cohort study ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
Moderate sedation outside the operating room is performed for a variety of medical and surgical procedures. It involves the administration of different drug combinations by nonanesthesia professionals. Few data exist on risk stratification and patient outcomes in the adult population. Current literature suggests that sedation can be associated with significant adverse outcomes. The aims of this study were to evaluate the nature of adverse events associated with moderate sedation and to examine their relation to patient characteristics and outcomes. In this retrospective review, 52 cases with moderate sedation safety incidents were identified out of approximately 143,000 cases during an 8-year period at a tertiary care medical center. We describe types of adverse events and the severity of associated harm. We used bivariate and multivariate analyses to examine the links between event types and both patient and procedure characteristics. The most common adverse event and unplanned intervention were oversedation leading to apnea (57.7% of cases) and the use of reversal agents (55.8%), respectively. Oversedation, hypoxemia, reversal agent use, and prolonged bag-mask ventilation were most common in cardiology (84.6%, 53.9%, 84.6%, and 38.5% of cases, respectively) and gastroenterology (87.5%, 75%, 87.5%, and 50%) suites. Miscommunication was reported most frequently in the emergency department (83.3%) and on the inpatient floor (69.2%). Higher body mass index was associated with increased rates of hypoxemia and intubation but lower rates of hypotension. Advanced age boosted the rates of oversedation, hypoxemia, and reversal agent use. Women were more likely than men to experience oversedation, hypotension, prolonged bag-mask ventilation, and reversal agent use. Patient harm was associated with age, body mass index, comorbidities, female sex, and procedures in the gastroenterology suite. Providers should take into account patient characteristics and procedure types when assessing the risks of harmful sedation-related complications.
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- 2017
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5. Are women less career centric than men? Structure, culture, and identity investments
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Marcie Pitt-Catsouphes, Stephen Sweet, Natalia Sarkisian, and Christina Matz-Costa
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Structure (mathematical logic) ,Sociology and Political Science ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Identity (social science) ,050109 social psychology ,Minor (academic) ,Development ,Multinational corporation ,0502 economics and business ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Gender gap ,Centrality ,China ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050203 business & management - Abstract
Some work/family scholars assume that gender differences in career centrality (i.e. the importance of career to one's identity) are a result of differential job characteristics and family demands; others trace these differences to pre-existing cultural orientations. Using the 2010 Generations of Talent data from 9210 employees working in 11 countries for 7 multinational companies, this study verifies the existence of gender differences in career centrality and explores structural and cultural explanations. Gender disparities in career centrality are modest, indicating that women's and men's identification with careers is more similar than is commonly asserted; the most pronounced (but still relatively small) disparities are observed in Japan and China. A large portion of the gender gap is explained by job characteristics, supporting structural explanations. Family demands contribute to explaining the gap as well, but the findings are unexpected: having minor children is associated with higher career centr...
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- 2015
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6. Racial/ethnic differences in post-migration education among adult immigrants in the USA
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Natalia Sarkisian and Rocío Calvo
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Cultural Studies ,White (horse) ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Ethnic group ,Gender studies ,Human capital ,Adult education ,Foreign born ,Anthropology ,Demographic economics ,Racial/ethnic difference ,Sociology ,Young adult ,media_common - Abstract
Despite the extensive scholarly interest in racial/ethnic differences in education among immigrants in the USA, limited research has examined the determinants of racial/ethnic gaps in post-migration adult education. Most immigrants, however, move to the USA as young adults, when education is decisive in shaping their incorporation. We use the National Household Education Survey (NHES) to examine whether pre-migration human capital and post-migration socio-economic circumstances can account for racial/ethnic differences in post-migration schooling. The results reveal that Latino/a immigrants are less likely than white and Asian immigrants to attend advanced and career-related educational programmes, but they seek general education more than Asians. These differences can be explained by racial/ethnic disparities in pre-migration human capital and post-migration employment, with pre-migration education and language training being particularly important. We conclude that education has a tendency to reproduce ...
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- 2015
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7. Individual Troubles, Shared Troubles: The Multiplicative Effect of Individual and Country-Level Unemployment on Life Satisfaction in 95 Nations (1981-2009)
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Natalia Sarkisian, Esteban Calvo, and Christine A. Mair
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History ,Labour economics ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,National accounts ,Multilevel model ,Life satisfaction ,Context (language use) ,World Development Indicators ,Social security ,Economic inequality ,Anthropology ,Unemployment ,Economics ,media_common - Abstract
Although the negative association between unemployment and life satisfaction is well documented, much theoretical and empirical controversy surrounds the question of how unemployment actually shapes life satisfaction. Previous studies suggest that unemployment may endanger subjective well-being through individual experiences, contextual influences, or a combination of both. Drawing on data from the World and European Values Surveys, National Accounts Official Country Data, Social Security Programs Throughout the World Reports, World Development Indicators, and World Income Inequality databases for 398,533 individuals in 95 nations (1981–2009), we use three-level hierarchical linear models to test four competing theory-based hypotheses—that unemployment shapes life satisfaction through individual, contextual, additive, or multiplicative effects. Our results support a multiplicative interaction between individual- and country-level unemployment. Unemployed individuals are less satisfied than other individuals, and when unemployment rates rise, their satisfaction drops even further below students, homemakers, and employed individuals; retirees, however, become more similar to the unemployed. We discuss these findings in light of previous theoretical models to argue for a model where individual unemployment is understood in the context of diverse labor force statuses and national unemployment rates. We conclude with policy suggestions aiming to address the negative consequences of unemployment through individualized and contextualized plans.
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- 2014
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8. Using a Micro-Level Model to Generate a Macro-Level Model of Productive Successful Aging
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John B. Williamson, Natalia Sarkisian, and Jessica K. M. Johnson
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Employment ,Male ,Aging ,Labour economics ,Social Values ,Culture ,Special Issue: Successful Aging ,Gross domestic product ,Life Expectancy ,Macro level ,Economics ,Per capita ,Humans ,Cross-cultural ,Longitudinal Studies ,Path analysis (statistics) ,Aged ,Successful aging ,Regression analysis ,General Medicine ,Models, Theoretical ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Income ,Life expectancy ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Gerontology ,Stress, Psychological - Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Aging successfully entails good physical and cognitive health, as well as ongoing participation in social and productive activity. This study hones in on participation in productive activity, a factor that makes an important contribution to successful aging. One conceptual model of productive activity in later life specifies the antecedents and consequences of productivity. This study draws on that micro-level model to develop a corresponding macro-level model and assesses its utility for examining the predictors of and explaining the relationships between one form of productivity (labor force participation rates) and one aspect of well-being (average life expectancy) among males and females. Design and Methods: Random effects regression models and path analysis were used to analyze cross-national longitudinal data for 24 high-income Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries at seven time points (1980–2010; 168 observations total). Results: OECD countries with higher labor force participation rates among older workers have higher life expectancies. Labor force participation mediates the effects of gross domestic product per capita on male and female life expectancy, and it mediates the effect of self-employment rate for men, but it acts as a suppressor with regard to the effect of public spending on male and female life expectancy. Implications: A well-known micro-level model of productive activity can be fruitfully adapted to account for macro-level cross-national variation in productivity and well-being.
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- 2014
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9. Work–life balance and performance across countries: cultural and institutional approaches
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Ariane Ollier-Malaterre, Kelly M. Hannum, Sarah Stawiski, and Natalia Sarkisian
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Public economics ,Human resource management ,Work–life balance ,Sociology - Published
- 2014
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10. Causal Effects of Retirement Timing on Subjective Physical and Emotional Health
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Christopher R. Tamborini, Natalia Sarkisian, and Esteban Calvo
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Employment ,Male ,Gerontology ,Time Factors ,Social Psychology ,Models, Psychological ,Cohort Studies ,Humans ,Aged ,Retirement ,Depression ,Instrumental variable ,Regression analysis ,Middle Aged ,Health and Retirement Study ,Random effects model ,Health Surveys ,Mental health ,United States ,Test (assessment) ,Clinical Psychology ,Health ,Female ,Demographic economics ,Self Report ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Retirement age ,Panel data - Abstract
Objectives. This article explores the effects of the timing of retirement on subjective physical and emotional health. Using panel data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), we test 4 theory-based hypotheses about these effects— that retirements maximize health when they happen earlier, later, anytime, or on time. Method. We employ fixed and random effects regression models with instrumental variables to estimate the short- and long-term causal effects of retirement timing on self-reported health and depressive symptoms. Results. Early retirements—those occurring prior to traditional and legal retirement age—dampen health. Discussion. Workers who begin their retirement transition before cultural and institutional timetables experience the worst health outcomes; this finding offers partial support to the psychosocial-materialist approach that emphasizes the benefits of retiring later. Continued employment after traditionally expected retirement age, however, offers no health benefits. In combination, these findings offer some support for the cultural-institutional approach but suggest that we need to modify our understanding of how cultural-institutional forces operate. Retiring too early can be problematic but no disadvantages are associated with late retirements. Raising the retirement age, therefore, could potentially reduce subjective health of retirees by expanding the group of those whose retirements would be considered early.
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- 2012
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11. Book Review: Ain’t No Trust: How Bosses, Boyfriends, and Bureaucrats Fail Low-Income Mothers and Why it Matters by Judith A. Levine
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Natalia Sarkisian
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Gender Studies ,Low income ,Sociology and Political Science ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Ain't - Published
- 2015
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12. Spiritual Individualism or Engaged Spirituality? Social Implications of Holistic Spirituality among Mind-Body-Spirit Practitioners
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Seil Oh and Natalia Sarkisian
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Individualism ,Psychotherapist ,Mind–body problem ,Spirituality ,Religious studies ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2011
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13. Flow and Happiness in Later Life: An Investigation into the Role of Daily and Weekly Flow Experiences
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Natalia Sarkisian, Amy Love Collins, and Ellen Winner
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Activities of daily living ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Life satisfaction ,Affect (psychology) ,Developmental psychology ,Feeling ,Low arousal theory ,mental disorders ,Happiness ,Positive psychology ,Subjective well-being ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Fifty-four older adults ranging in age from 70 to 86 years old (M = 77.54) reported daily levels of positive and negative affect, life satisfaction and daily activities for seven consecutive days. Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) was used to investigate inter- and intra-individual effects of flow experiences on affect. Higher quality of flow was positively associated with high arousal positive affect (i.e., feeling peppy, enthusiastic, happy), negatively associated with low arousal negative affect (i.e., feeling sad and disappointed), and positively associated with life satisfaction. However, more frequent flow experiences throughout the week predicted lower average levels of positive affect and life satisfaction. Overall, the results demonstrate that flow is linked to the affective experiences of older adults, and that an individual’s overall propensity to experience flow may be influential beyond the immediate effects of a given flow experience.
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- 2008
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14. Perceptions of medical interactions between healthcare providers and American Indian older adults
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Janette Beals, Dedra Buchwald, Natalia Sarkisian, Jack Goldberg, and Eva Marie Garroutte
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Adult ,Male ,Gerontology ,Health (social science) ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Office Visits ,Cultural identity ,Health Personnel ,Ethnic group ,Ethnic origin ,Article ,Patient satisfaction ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Social medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Social identity theory ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cultural Characteristics ,Social perception ,business.industry ,Professional-Patient Relations ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Patient Satisfaction ,Indians, North American ,Female ,Perception ,business ,Cultural competence ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Cultural competence models assume that culture affects medical encounters, yet little research uses objective measures to examine how this may be true. Do providers and racial/ethnic minority patients interpret the same interactions similarly or differently? How might patterns of provider-patient concordance and discordance vary for patients with different cultural characteristics? We collected survey data from 115 medical visits with American Indian older adults at a clinic operated by the Cherokee Nation (in Northeastern Oklahoma, USA), asking providers and patients to evaluate nine affective and instrumental interactions. Examining data from the full sample, we found that provider and patient ratings were significantly discordant for all interactions (Wilcoxon signed-rank test p
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- 2008
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15. Economic development, social inequality, and the state: a cross‐national analysis of child mortality in less developed countries
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Ce Shen, Thanh V. Tran, and Natalia Sarkisian
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Child mortality ,Economic growth ,Health (social science) ,Gross national income ,Sociology and Political Science ,Income inequality metrics ,Class stratification ,Economics ,Developing country ,Social inequality ,Gross domestic product ,Infant mortality - Abstract
Many cross‐national studies of child and infant mortality emphasize predictors linked to modernization theory, such as economic development level as measured by GNI (gross national income) or GDP (gross domestic product) per capita. However, much less research considers the effects of social inequality on child mortality. This paper relies on four theoretical frameworks. In addition to modernization theory, it assesses the social democratic theory, the class stratification theory, and the gender stratification theory by examining the effects of state commitment to health care, class inequality, and gender inequality on child mortality. The findings demonstrate some support for each of the theories. Along with economic development, state commitment to health care, class inequality, and gender inequality demonstrate significant direct effects on child mortality in LDCs (less developed countries). In addition, economic development has a significant indirect effect on child mortality via state commitment to h...
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- 2008
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16. Till Marriage Do Us Part: Adult Children’s Relationships With Their Parents
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Natalia Sarkisian and Naomi Gerstel
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Social network ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Aging parents ,NEVER MARRIED ,Extended family ,Developmental psychology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Anthropology ,Kinship ,Institution ,Marital status ,Elderly parents ,business ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
Although some emphasize the integrative character of marriage, others argue that marriage undermines relations with extended kin, including aging parents. Utilizing NSFH data (N= 6,108), we find that married women and men have less intense intergenerational ties than the never married and the divorced: The married are less likely to live with parents, stay in touch, and give or receive emotional, financial, and practical help. These differences hold even when we control for structural characteristics, including time demands, needs and resources, and demographic and extended family characteristics. We conclude that marriage is a greedy institution for both women and men. Given the inadequacy of structural explanations, we suggest that cultural explanations for this greediness should be explored.
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- 2008
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17. Street Men, Family Men: Race and Men's Extended Family Integration
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Natalia Sarkisian
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History ,White (horse) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Extended family ,Gender studies ,Disadvantaged ,Race (biology) ,Anthropology ,Cultural values ,Racial differences ,Sociology ,Disengagement theory ,Disadvantage ,Demography - Abstract
Disorganization theories postulate that black men have largely abandoned their familial roles. Using the NSFH data, this article refutes the hypothesis of black men's familial disengagement by focusing on extended family integration. Black men are more likely than white men to live with or near extended kin, as well as to frequently see kin in person. Men are similar across race in terms of emotional and practical help, although black men are less likely than white men to provide financial assistance. The racial differences can be mostly attributed to the socioeconomic disadvantage of black men. The similarities emerge because blacks' economic disadvantage hinders their involvement, but cultural values and extended family structure bring their involvement to the levels of the more economically advantaged whites.
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- 2007
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18. Extended Family Integration Among Euro and Mexican Americans: Ethnicity, Gender, and Class
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Natalia Sarkisian, Naomi Gerstel, and Mariana Gerena
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Ethnic group ,Extended family ,Gender studies ,Social class ,Family life ,Social support ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Anthropology ,Cultural diversity ,Ideology ,Sociology ,Socioeconomic status ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
This article compares the extended family integration of Euro and Mexican American women and men and assesses the importance of class and culture in explaining ethnic differences. Using National Survey of Families and Households II data (N = 7,929), we find that ethnic differences depend on the dimension of integration. Mexican Americans exhibit higher rates of kin coresidence and proximity, but lower rates of financial support than Euro Americans. Two additional differences exist only among women: Mexican American women are more likely than Euro American women to give household or child care help. As to the explanation for these differences, social class is the key factor; cultural variables have little effect. Our findings support a theoretical framework attending to intersections among ethnicity, gender, and class. Key Words: caregiving, extended kin, Hispanic, intergenerational, Latino, social support. Feminist scholars who first developed the intersectional framework pointed out the interlocking nature of race, gender, and class inequalities (Collins, 2000; hooks, 1981 ). Their primary concern was bringing race/ethnicity and class to the center of gender studies. We argue that it is equally important to introduce gender and class into race/ethnicity studies (Gerstel & Sarkisian, 2006a). In this article, we demonstrate the importance of such an intersectional approach to race/ ethnicity by focusing on Mexican American extended families in the United States and comparing them to those of Euro Americans. The article addresses a contemporary debate concerning racial/ethnic differences in extended family life: the superintegration versus disintegration debate (Sarkisian, Gerena, & Gerstel, 2006; Sarkisian & Gerstel, 2004b) as it pertains to Mexican Americans. On one side are those who argue that Latino/a families in general, and Mexican American families in particular, are more integrated than those of Euro Americans. They suggest Latinos/as live near kin, stay in touch, provide many types of assistance, and often put the needs of their extended families before their own (Baca Zinn & Wells, 2000; Mirande, 1997). On the other side are those who argue that Latino/a extended families are less likely to provide care and support to kin than Euro American families (Menjivar, 2000; Roschelle, 1997). Notably, despite the highly gendered nature of family life, most studies that could potentially shed light on this debate examine ethnic differences in family integration without separating women and men. Challenging this approach and following the intersectional framework, we examine ethnic differences in family integration separately for women and men. Further, whereas this debate primarily focuses on the direction of difference between Mexican and Euro Americans, recently scholars have begun to argue for the need to move beyond mere description of variation to an examination of those social conditions, both cultural and socioeconomic, that explain differences in extended families (Baca Zinn & Wells, 2000). The role of social class is especially important in these discussions, with scholars asking whether ethnic differences in family integration can be attributed to social class or whether cultural differences are responsible for these differences in integration. Using data from Wave II of the National Survey of Families and Households (NSFH), this article first describes the differences in extended family integration between Mexican Americans and Euro Americans and, second, investigates the social conditions that explain these differences using a conceptual framework that takes into account both culture and social class. More specifically, we explain ethnic differences in family integration using measures of cultural variation, including familism, religious involvement, and gender ideology, and indicators of social class standing, including income, education, and employment. …
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- 2007
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19. Intergenerational Care and the Greediness of Adult Children's Marriages
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Naomi Gerstel and Natalia Sarkisian
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Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology - Published
- 2007
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20. Marriage: The Good, the Bad, and the Greedy
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Naomi Gerstel and Natalia Sarkisian
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050402 sociology ,Injury control ,Accident prevention ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,medicine.disease ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,0506 political science ,0504 sociology ,Injury prevention ,050602 political science & public administration ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medical emergency ,Form of the Good ,Psychology ,computer ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Even good marriages can have some bad side effects, taking people away from other social connections.
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- 2006
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21. 'Doing Family Ambivalence': Nuclear and Extended Families in Single Mothers' Lives
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Natalia Sarkisian
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Value (ethics) ,Casual ,Extended family ,Gender studies ,Single mothers ,Ambivalence ,Family life ,Doing gender ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Anthropology ,Sociology ,Social psychology ,Nuclear family ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Little research today examines the connections between nuclear and extended family ties, especially among single mothers. I congratulate Margaret Nelson on her refreshing examination of this issue and commend the Journal of Marriage and Family and its editor, Alexis Walker, for inviting a public debate on this article. Nelson examines single mothers' accounts of their family experiences, describing their choices in defining their families and negotiating the relationships with their own parents, nonresident fathers of their children, and new boyfriends or fiances. Importantly, Nelson shows how extended kin ties of single mothers are affected by the cultural expectations of "nuclear" family ties. Nelson's main theoretical framework is that of "doing family. " Furthermore, her analysis elaborates on this theoretical approach by revealing the structural and cultural forces behind doing family processes. To fully account for Nelson's findings, however, it is necessary to combine the notion of doing family with that of family ambivalence. I address three concepts related to the broader family ambivalence framework-boundary ambiguity, role ambiguity, and intergenerational ambivalence-and discuss their value for understanding Nelson's findings. Further, I discuss her findings with regard to the cultural ideal of the Standard North American Family (SNAF; Smith, 1993) and address the role of nuclear and extended families in contemporary American society. "DOING FAMILY" As mentioned above, Nelson interprets her findings through the lens of "doing family." This perspective emphasizes interactional work and activities that create and sustain family ties, define family boundaries, as well as specify appropriate behaviors for different family members. Nelson is correct to point out that the concept of doing family has been traditionally undertheorized, especially when compared with the concept of "doing gender," the meaning of which is far better fleshed out and developed. Although Nelson mentions that her use of the term doing family remains "far more casual" than the more elaborate notion of doing gender, in fact she develops this concept more deeply than much prior work on doing family. Agreeing with Naples (2001) that the activities of doing family are most apparent for nonnormative families, Nelson focuses on single mothers. In contrast to much prior work on doing family that focused on activities that create and enhance links between family members (family meals, trips to the zoo), Nelson emphasizes the boundary work that involves decisions on who counts as family and who does not and what rights and obligations are accorded to those who do. Further, in line with the work on doing gender, Nelson also identifies the structural and cultural forces that shape how single mothers perform families. Structural forces involve financial need and the need for child care that require single mothers to rely on their parents for help; cultural factors involve the ideal of SNAP. The combination of these forces introduces a substantial amount of ambivalence into single mothers' family life. Although Nelson emphasizes doing family in her analytic framework, "doing family ambivalence" might be a more accurate description of what is going on in these single mothers' lives. Even though these women construct the boundaries and create the rules, they experience indecision, conflicted feelings, and uncertainty in the process. That is, there is a high degree of ambivalence involved in their choices. As Nelson puts it, "individuals within what might be defined as a family grouping might themselves have conflicting notions of just what family they are doing, and for just what reasons they are doing it" (p. 794). Addressing the normative structure of kin obligations, Rossi and Rossi (1990, p. 198) emphasize two primary areas where "ambiguities show up with particular force," grandparenting and remarriage. The single mothers that Nelson studies experience ambiguities and ambivalence stemming from negotiating the issues related to both of these areas as well as to nonresident fatherhood. …
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- 2006
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22. Extended Family Ties Among Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and Whites: Superintegration or Disintegration?
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Naomi Gerstel, Natalia Sarkisian, and Mariana Gerena
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Latin Americans ,Ethnic group ,Extended family ,Gender studies ,Education ,Unmet needs ,Family studies ,Conceptual framework ,Cultural diversity ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Sociology ,Nuclear family ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Demography - Abstract
Addressing recent theoretical debates, this study examined the differences in extended family integration among Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and Whites, as well as the importance of culture and structure in explaining these differences. Our findings showed Whites and Latinos/as have distinctive patterns of extended family integration: Mexicans and Puerto Ricans exhibited higher rates of coresidence and proximate living than Whites; Whites had greater involvement in financial support than Mexicans or Puerto Ricans, but Mexicans were more involved in instrumental help. Structural factors such as income, education, and nuclear family composition explained much of these ethnic differences. The study's findings suggest that policy should emphasize the unmet needs in Latino/a communities and the role of extended families. Key Words: contact, coresidence, family integration, kin, Latino/a, proximity, support. Returning to an old debate once at the center of family studies, scholars are again discussing the prominence and character of extended families (Bengtson, 2001). This study examined die extended families of Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and Whites in the United States and addresses a contemporary theoretical debate, which we identify as the "superintegration versus disintegration" debate (Sarkisian & Gerstel, 2004, p. 812). Advocates of the superintegration side of this debate believe that Latino/a extended families are more integrated than White extended families. They suggest that Latinos/as live near, stay in touch, and provide many types of assistance to extended kin (Baca Zinn & Wells, 2000; Mirande, 1997). Conversely, disintegration scholars argue diat Latino/a extended families are less likely to provide support dian White extended families (Menjivar, 2000; Roschelle, 1997). To fully understand the dynamics of family integration among Latinos/as, however, we need to move beyond mere description of variation to explanationthat is, to an examination of the social conditions, both cultural and structural, that explain die differences (Baca Zinn & Wells, 2000). Litde research has systematically examined such explanatory factors. Further, most family research has investigated individuals with ethnic roots in Latin America as a group, diat is, combining them into one panethnicity (labeled as Hispanic or Latino/a; Baca Zinn & Wells). A smaller subset of studies had distinguished Latino/a ethnic groups but investigated one group at a time. Both strategies make it impossible to assess either the similarities and differences in family integration among individual Latino/a groups or how such groups compare to Whites. This study examined Mexicans and Puerto Ricans separately. We focused on these two groups because they are the largest groups of Latinos/as in the United States. Moreover, Puerto Ricans and Mexicans originate from countries with different relationships to the United States and have different histories of migration (Baca Zinn & Wells, 2000). Importantly, these groups are purported to exhibit both differences and similarities on various structural and cultural conditions that we expected to shape extended family integration (Roschelle, 1997). Using data from the second wave of the National Survey of Families and Households (NSFH; Sweet & Bumpass, 1996), this study had the following two aims: (a) to explore differences in extended family integration of Mexicans and Puerto Ricans, as well as differences between each of these groups and Whites and (b) to investigate the social conditions that explain the ethnic differences using a conceptual framework that takes into account cultural and structural factors. Literature Review Prior Research on Latino/a Extended Family Integration Much of the extant literature on Latino/a extended families addressed one aspect of family integration at a time, frequently focusing solely on coresidence or kin support but using those findings to make overall conclusions about Latino/a extended families (e. …
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- 2006
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23. The Cultural Contradictions of Welfare
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Natalia Sarkisian
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Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political economy ,Economics ,Welfare ,media_common - Published
- 2005
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24. Kin Support among Blacks and Whites: Race and Family Organization
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Natalia Sarkisian and Naomi Gerstel
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Black women ,Child care ,White (horse) ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Racial group ,Gender studies ,Scholarship ,Race (biology) ,050902 family studies ,050903 gender studies ,Racial differences ,Sociology ,0509 other social sciences ,Diversity (politics) ,media_common - Abstract
This article addresses two central debates in the scholarship on black families: the disorganization versus superorganization debate and the culture versus structure debate. Focusing on kin support as a measure of family integration and using the National Survey of Families and Households (1992-1994), this article challenges the assumptions about black and white families in both debates. It shows that blacks and whites have different patterns of kin support involvement. Whereas blacks are more involved in practical support (help with transportation, household work, and child care), whites report greater involvement in financial and emotional kin support. This article also shows that gender is crucial for understanding racial differences. Black men and white men are very much alike, whereas there are many significant differences between black women and white women. Furthermore, in understanding kin support, diversity within racial groups appears to matter more than race itself. Social structure explains most of the racial differences in kin support, though cultural differences between whites and blacks do exist and help to explain kin support.
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- 2004
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25. Intergenerational Caregiving
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Natalia Sarkisian
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Sociology and Political Science ,Political science ,Economic history ,Media studies - Published
- 2010
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26. The Color of Family Ties: Race, Class, Gender, and Extended Family Involvement
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Natalia Sarkisian and Naomi Gerstel
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Class (set theory) ,Race (biology) ,Family ties ,Extended family ,Sociology ,Genealogy - Published
- 2013
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27. Nuclear Family Values, Extended Family Lives : The Power of Race, Class, and Gender
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Natalia Sarkisian, Naomi Gerstel, Natalia Sarkisian, and Naomi Gerstel
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- Nuclear families--United States, Families--United States
- Abstract
Nuclear Family Values, Extended Family Lives shows how the current emphasis on the nuclear family – with its exclusion of the extended family – is narrow, even deleterious, and misses much of family life. This omission is tied to gender, race, and class. This book is broken down into six chapters. Chapter one discusses how, when promoting'family values'and talking about'family as the basic unit of American society,'social commentators, politicians, and social scientists alike typically ignore extended kin ties and focus only on the nuclear family. Chapters two and three show that the focus on marriage and the nuclear family is a narrow view that ignores the familial practices and experiences of many Americans – particularly those of women who do much of the work of maintaining kin ties and racial/ethnic minorities for whom extended kin are centrally important. Chapter four focuses on class and economic inequality and explores how an emphasis on the nuclear family may actually promulgate a vision of family life that dismisses the very social resources and community ties that are critical to the survival strategies of those in need. In chapter five, the authors argue that marriage actually detracts from social integration and ties to broader communities. Finally, in chapter six, the authors suggest that the focus on marriage and the nuclear family and the inattention to the extended family distort and reduce the power of social policy in the United States.
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- 2011
28. Affective interactions in medical visits: ethnic differences among American Indian older adults
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Eva Marie Garroutte, Sergey Karamnov, and Natalia Sarkisian
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Adult ,Male ,Office Visits ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ethnic group ,Empathy ,Health capital ,Affect (psychology) ,White People ,Humans ,media_common ,Community and Home Care ,Physician-Patient Relations ,White (horse) ,Cultural Characteristics ,Social Identification ,Oklahoma ,Middle Aged ,Affect ,Logistic Models ,Scale (social sciences) ,Indians, North American ,Female ,Ordered logit ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Gerontology ,Clinical psychology ,American Ethnicity - Abstract
Objective: Investigate influence of ethnicity on older American Indian patients’ interpretations of providers’ affective behaviors. Method: Using data from 115 older American Indian patients, random effects ordered logit models related patient ratings of providers’ respect, empathy, and rapport first to separate measures of American Indian and White American ethnicity, then to “ethnic discordance,” or difference between providers’ and patients’ cultural characteristics. Results: In models accounting for patients’ ethnicity only, high scores for American Indian ethnicity were linked to reduced evaluations for providers’ respect; high scores on White ethnicity were associated with elevated ratings for empathy and rapport. In models accounting for provider–patient ethnic discordance, high discordance on either ethnicity scale was associated with reduced ratings for the same behaviors. Discussion: Findings support “orthogonal ethnic identity” theory and extend “cultural health capital” theory, suggesting a pathway by which ethnicity becomes relevant to experience of health care among older adults.
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- 2012
29. Marriage and Families
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Naomi Gerstel and Natalia Sarkisian
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- 2012
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30. Th e Realities of Family Life: Extended Families and Gender
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Natalia Sarkisian and Naomi Gerstel
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Extended family ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Family life - Published
- 2012
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31. Social Policies and Families
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Naomi Gerstel and Natalia Sarkisian
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- 2012
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32. Nuclear Family Values, Extended Family Lives
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Natalia Sarkisian and Naomi Gerstel
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- 2012
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33. Race and Family Organization
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Naomi Gerstel and Natalia Sarkisian
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Race (biology) ,Gender studies ,Sociology - Published
- 2012
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34. Th e Widespread Focus on Nuclear Families
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Naomi Gerstel and Natalia Sarkisian
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Focus (computing) ,Political science ,Gender studies ,Nuclear family - Published
- 2012
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35. Review of Family, Kinship and State in Contemporary Europe (3 Vols.) The Century of Welfare: Eight Countries (Vol. 1). Hannes Grandits, Editor. The View from Below: Nineteen Localities (Vol. 2). Patrick Heady and Peter Schweitzer, Editors. Perspectives on Theory and Policy (Vol. 3). Patrick Heady and Martin Kohli, Editors. Reviewed by Natalia Sarkisian
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Natalia Sarkisian
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Sociology and Political Science ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2012
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36. Cultural Identities and Perceptions of Health Among Health Care Providers and Older American Indians
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Eva Marie Garroutte, Natalia Sarkisian, Lester Arguelles, Jack Goldberg, and Dedra Buchwald
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Physician-Patient Relations ,Racial Groups ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Original Articles ,Cultural Diversity ,Delivery of Health Care - Published
- 2006
37. Explaining the gender gap in help to parents: The importance of employment
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Natalia Sarkisian and Naomi Gerstel
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Occupational prestige ,caregiving ,Socialization ,social support ,Social support ,Alliance ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,work ,Spouse ,Anthropology ,Cultural diversity ,employment ,gender ,intergenerational ,Gender history ,Psychology ,Set (psychology) ,Social psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Although it is well established that adult daughters spend more time giving assistance to their parents than do sons, the sources of this gender gap are not well understood. This paper asks: To what extent can this gap be explained by structural variation, especially the different rates of employment and kinds of jobs that women and men tend to hold? Using data from the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 7,350), the paper shows that both employment status and job characteristics, especially wages and self-employment, are important factors in explaining the gender gap in the help given to parents, and that these operate similarly for women and men. Key Words: caregiving, employment, gender, intergenerational, social support, work. Over the past couple of decades, a growing body of literature in a number of different fields finds a gender gap in help to kin: Women spend significantly more time giving help than do men. More specifically, most of this literature suggests that women are more likely to assist their own parents and, when married, more likely than their husbands to provide help to their spouse's parents (e.g., Allen, Blieszner, & Roberto, 2001; National Alliance for Caregiving and AARP, 1997; Stone, Cafferata, & Sangl, 1987; Walker, 2001; for an exception concerning help to parents-in-law, see Lee, Spitze, & Logan, 2003). Women's preponderance as providers of assistance to parents has been well documented but remains largely unexplained. To explain this difference between women and men, we can turn to broad theories developed to account for gender gaps in other kinds of family work, both in and outside the home. In their explanations of gender gaps in family work, many theories focus on the structural forces that operate in adult life (e.g., Epstein, 1988; Gerson, 1993; Risman, 1998). Though variously defined, these structural factors are typically understood as an array of material, objective, and external constraints and opportunities (Hays, 1994; Rubinstein, 2001). Structural explanations for the gender gaps in family work often emphasize the constraints and opportunities generated by the different employment experiences of women and men. Because men are more likely to be employed and, when employed, to have more lucrative and time-consuming or satisfying jobs than women, their jobs pull or push them away from family responsibilities (Gerson; Risman). When women have the same employment conditions as men, they will give the same amount of help as men; that is, once we take into account such different employment experiences, the structural model suggests, gender as a dichotomy is neutralized and will yield little independent effect. Alternative theories assert that structure cannot fully account for the gender gaps in family work. Some of these theories attribute gaps to an essential gender dichotomy rooted in biology (for reviews, see Epstein, 1988; Marini, 1990; Udry, 2000). Another set attributes them to psychological differences between women and men created by early socialization (Chodorow, 1978, 1999; Gilligan, 1982; Witt, 1994). Still another traces them to cultural factors that operate in adult life (Brines, 1994; Greenstein, 2000; Potuchek, 1997; West & Zimmerman, 1987). All of these alternative theories, irrespective of whether they focus on biology, early socialization, or cultural differences, assert that even when adult men and women are located in the same structural positions-more specifically, hold the same jobs-they differ in the amount of family work they do. According to these theories, we would expect a gender gap to exist even between women and men who are employed in the same kinds of jobs. We also would expect similar employment experiences to shape the help given to parents in different ways for adult women and men. This article seeks to determine how much of the gender gap in the amount of help given to parents is tied to distinctively structural forces, especially employment and its conditions, that operate in adult women's and men's lives. …
- Published
- 2004
38. The Career Mystique: Cracks in the American Dream. Phyllis Moen and Patricia Roehling
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Natalia Sarkisian
- Subjects
Gender studies ,Social mobility ,Job security ,Social reproduction ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Feminist movement ,Unpaid work ,Anthropology ,Law ,Life course approach ,Sociology ,Seniority ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Bandwagon effect - Abstract
The Career Mystique: Cracks in the American Dream. Phyllis Moen and Patricia Roehling. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. 2004. 289 pp. ISBN 0-7425-2861-8. $65.00 (cloth). ISBN 0-7425-2862-6. $22.95 (paperback). Many have criticized the structure of jobs and careers, which require the degree of devotion incompatible with family responsibilities. In The Career Mystique, Phyllis Moen and Patricia Roehling extend this argument by approaching it from a gendered life course perspective. They argue that "the issue is not how employees can balance their personal lives with the demands of their jobs, but how the career mystique and the regime of policies and practices built up around it constrain women's and men's options at every stage of their lives" (p. 22). Whereas Betty Friedan developed the idea of the "feminine mystique" to problematize the fulfillment stemming from domestic life, Moen and Roehling develop the complementary concept of the "career mystique" to problematize the rewards of all-encompassing paid labor. They challenge the belief that long hours of hard work bring job security and upward mobility to either the majority of men or the majority of women. Nevertheless, as they show, this myth still shapes not only individuals' expectations and values but also governmental policies and corporate regulations, creating a "career regime" that is out of sync with the lives of contemporary workers. Moen and Roehling argue that the career mystique and feminine mystique have emerged in tandem as the two gendered components of the American Dream. When the feminist movement challenged the expectations of the feminine mystique, however, it failed to challenge the career mystique. Designed to coexist with the feminine mystique, career mystique now reigns supreme for both women and men, either ignoring the work of social reproduction that was glorified by feminine mystique or promoting an image of the "superwoman" who combines a career with being primarily responsible for childrearing and other unpaid work. As a result, career mystique both creates a care deficit and perpetuates the gender divide. Further, career mystique assumes a lockstep career progressing from full-time education to full-time employment to the full-time leisure of retirement. Even though such lockstep careers were always unattainable for a substantial part of the workforce, a large portion of employees in the 1950s did have them. As the job market changed and as more women climbed on the career mystique bandwagon, however, this American Dream increasingly became a myth for the majority of the labor force. On the one hand, job requirements remained essentially the same as they were when only men were expected to follow the career mystique: Individuals are still expected to work long hours and put their jobs and careers above all else. On the other hand, employment rewards have drastically changed: Even for White, middle-class men, their incomes are no longer sufficient to meet family needs and require dual earner arrangements; hard work and loyalty no longer guarantee job security; and the link between seniority and higher income is frequently disrupted by layoffs. Indeed, "the Faustian bargain of trading a lifetime of paid work for a lifetime of income security is probably gone forever" (p. 9). After the introductory chapter's discussion of the concept of career mystique, the book takes the reader through the gendered life course and uses a variety of quantitative and qualitative data to examine women's and men's experiences with jobs and families and to document the influence of career mystique on their lives. Chapters 2 and 3 examine the occupational aspirations of children and young women and men, demonstrating that they learn the myth of career success early in life. …
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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