Property | Value |
?:about
|
|
?:abstract
|
-
Research found that not only macro-level processes like cohort replacements foster gender role attitude (GRA) change, but also life events and changes in lived realities. Framing the COVID-19 pandemic as a 'natural experiment' allows to reduce endogeneity when examining the association between emerging cognitive dissonance and GRA change. Estimating asymmetrical fixed effects regressions, I investigate the influence of changes in the division of family labor on GRAs for respondents with no pre-pandemic attitude-behavior discrepancy, using pairfam waves 11 and 13. Indeed, changes in behavior for respondents who had aligned behaviors and attitudes before the pandemic can be associated with GRA adaptation: A change toward an egalitarian division of family labor during the pandemic can be associated with more egalitarian GRAs. Likewise, a change toward an inegalitarian division can be associated with less egalitarian GRAs. These findings support the usefulness of cognitive dissonance as one explanatory mechanism for intra-individual attitudinal change.
(xsd:string)
|
?:author
|
|
?:citation
|
|
?:contributor
|
|
?:duplicate
|
|
?:hasFulltext
|
|
is
?:hasPart
of
|
|
?:inLanguage
|
-
Englisch (EN)
(xsd:string)
|
?:libraryLocation
|
|
?:linksLabel
|
|
?:name
|
-
Changing Attitudes? : Investigating the Link between Couples’ Pandemic Behavior, Cognitive Dissonance, and Gender Role Attitudes in Germany
(xsd:string)
|
?:provider
|
|
?:publicationType
|
-
Buch
(de)
-
Elektronische Ressource
(xsd:string)
-
books
(en)
|
?:reference
|
|
?:sourceInfo
|
-
GESIS-BIB
(xsd:string)
-
In: Zeitschrift für Soziologie, Bd. 53 (2024) H. 3 ; S. 298-313. ISSN 0340-1804
(xsd:string)
|
rdf:type
|
|
?:url
|
|