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  1. Changes in men's conservative gender ideologies: Cohort and period influences.Teresa Ciabattari - 2001 - Gender and Society 15 (4):574-591.
    Men's gender ideologies have changed more slowly than women's since the 1970s; this article analyzes the period and cohort processes that underlie men's attitude change and how the individual-level characteristics of conservative men differ by birth cohort. Using multidimensional measures of gender role attitudes from the 1974-1998 General Social Surveys, the author finds that changes in men's attitudes have been brought about both by period influences, especially during the 1970s, and by cohort replacement. Analyses of multivariate interaction effects demonstrate that (...)
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  • Social Trust and Female Board Representation: Evidence from China.Baoyin Qiu, Haohan Ren, Jingjing Zuo & Bo Cheng - 2023 - Journal of Business Ethics 188 (1):187-204.
    The underrepresentation of females on corporate boards is an important ethical issue that raises serious concerns about gender equality in senior management teams. Relying on a large sample of public firms from the Chinese market, we examine how social trust affects female board representation. We find that female board representation has a positive and significant relation with social trust. The effect is more pronounced in regions with a higher male-to-female sex ratio at birth, lower levels of education, lower GDP per (...)
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  • Gender Beliefs and the Meaning of Work Among Okinawan Women.Kristen Schultz Lee - 2006 - Gender and Society 20 (3):382-401.
    This qualitative research examines the work experiences and gender beliefs of 22 Okinawan women who were young adults during the Battle of Okinawa. In-depth interviews were conducted with Okinawan women, including a subsample of women widowed in World War II, and the work experiences and gender beliefs of widows and nonwidows are compared. Women's orientation to breadwinning is found to shape the gender beliefs that they hold. Widows who defined their work as breadwinning maintained traditional gender beliefs, in compensation for (...)
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  • For whom does education enlighten?: Race, gender, education, and beliefs about social inequality.Else K. Kyyrö & Emily W. Kane - 2001 - Gender and Society 15 (5):710-733.
    Beliefs have the potential to obscure and legitimate, or to challenge, inequalities of gender and race. Through an analysis of the association between education and beliefs about racial and gender inequality, this article explores for whom education is most likely to foster beliefs that challenge social inequality. Data from the 1996 General Social Survey suggest that education tends to have a greater positive impact on rejection of group segregation and rejection of victim-blaming explanations for inequality than it does on recognition (...)
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  • Conceptualizing and measuring gender ideology as an identity.Amy Kroska - 2000 - Gender and Society 14 (3):368-394.
    Although gender idology is sometimes conceptualized as an identity, researchers invariably measure it with attitude scales. The author introduces a self-administered, vignette-style instrument that measures gender ideology as an identity. Using a sample of 309 married or cohabiting respondents, she demonstrates the instrument's construct validity by showing it is strongly related to measures of the evaluation and the potency of three cultural categories: a feminist, a traditionalist about women's roles, and a househusband. The author discusses the benefits of using such (...)
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  • Traditional Gender Role Beliefs and Career Attainment in STEM: A Gendered Story?Anna-Lena Dicke, Nayssan Safavian & Jacquelynne S. Eccles - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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