Sassler S
Department of Population Dynamics, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21205-2179, USA.
Demography. 1995 Nov;32(4):557-75.
This paper uses the 1910 Census Public Use Sample to examine how the presence and activities of key family members shaped the labor force activity, domestic work, and schooling of working-age daughters. There is no evidence that daughters worked to send their brothers to school; parents practiced a more egalitarian distribution of resources than the literature suggests. Having brothers and sisters in school increased a daughter's odds of attending school herself. Similarly, daughters with employed siblings were more likely to be gainfully employed. Nonetheless, parents allocated activities to sons and daughters in ways that reinforced traditional gender roles. Working brothers increase daughters' likelihood of working in the home, while reducing their odds of attending school.
本文利用1910年人口普查公共使用样本,研究关键家庭成员的存在和活动如何影响适龄工作女儿的劳动力活动、家务劳动和学业。没有证据表明女儿工作是为了送兄弟上学;父母在资源分配上比文献所显示的更为平等。家中有兄弟姐妹在上学,会增加女儿自己上学的几率。同样,有就业兄弟姐妹的女儿更有可能获得有报酬的工作。尽管如此,父母以强化传统性别角色的方式为儿子和女儿分配活动。有工作的兄弟增加了女儿在家工作的可能性,同时降低了她们上学的几率。