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Who Cares Who Brings Home the Bacon?: Women’s Work, Marriage Inequality, and Political Attitudes
November 27, 2024
Mulroney Hall 4032
Who Cares Who Brings Home the Bacon?: Women’s Work, Marriage Inequality, and Political Attitudes

The Mulroney Institute, Political Science Department, and GAP Lab Present

Who Cares Who Brings Home the Bacon?: Women’s Work, Marriage Inequality, and Political Attitudes

Amanda Bittner, Political Science Department
Director, Gender & Politics Lab
Memorial University

Moderator: Rebecca Wallace, Political Science Department/PGOV
Mila Mulroney Chair in Women & Politics
Director, GAP Lab

Wednesday, November 27, 2024
4:00 pm–5:30 pm
Mulroney Hall 4032

 

The marital economic theory of specialization (Becker, Landes, & Michael, 1977) has been prominent around the world, with husbands more likely to participate in the labour market, and wives more likely to be in domestic roles, staying at home or working part-time, and the incomes of men and women tend to correspond with this division of labour. In recent decades, however, patterns are changing, as women are both increasingly present in the workforce and also taking high-status jobs. For many couples, the wives’ job status exceeds that of the husbands’. Scholars have begun to assess the impact of unequal job status in marriages on marital instability (Byrne & Barling 2016), workplace attitudes (Desai, Chugh, & Brief 2014), and overall well-being (Sandberg et al. 2013), but scant attention has been paid to the impact that job-status inequality in marriages may have on political attitudes.

Scholars have focused on the gender gap in political attitudes and behaviours (Box-Steffensmeier et al. 2004; Conover & Sapiro 1993) and have noted that not all women hold the same attitudes (Bittner & Goodyear-Grant 2017), and that there are differences in attitudes among women (and men) depending on partisanship (e.g., Lizotte 2017) and race (e.g., Holman & Schneider 2018). This talk will discuss understanding the extent to which job status inequality in marriage influences political attitudes and behaviours, relying on data from the most recent wave of the World Values Survey (2010–14). Dr. Bittner has found evidence of gendered breadwinning power dynamics: Women and men do not hold the same political attitudes, and the data suggest that breadwinning wives are penalized in the home. Male breadwinners’ attitudes reflect a high level of status and privilege, while the attitudes of breadwinning wives, lower-earning husbands, and lower-earning wives do not.

All are welcome.

 


 

Amanda Bittner, PhD

Amanda Bittner, PhD

Dr. Amanda Bittner is a political psychologist who studies elections and voting, with a particular focus on gender and politics. She has worked at Memorial University since 2008. In 2017, she founded the Gender & Politics Lab, a hub for research and community engagement activities related to gender and politics.

Dr. Bittner appears regularly in the media as a political commentator (in both English and French) and has won numerous awards for her research, academic service, and mentorship. In 2022, she was inducted as a member of the Royal Society of Canada's College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists. She has published five books and has substantial community activity experience and experience with financial leadership and management in community organizations.