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Journal of Family Issues
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Whose Time Is It?

The Effect of Employment and Work/Family Stress on Children’s Housework

Constance T. Gager

Montclair State University, gagerc{at}mail.montclair.edu

Laura A. Sanchez

Bowling Green State University

Alfred Demaris

Bowling Green State University

Children’s time use—and specifically the time they spend on household chores—is an important arena for understanding social change. However, few studies accurately depict the multiple factors influencing children’s household labor, including parent’s and children’s available time and parent’s levels of work/family stress. We address these gaps by exploring how parents’ and children’s time use and perceived stress constrains time for housework. We employ data on 3,560 households from a national survey of children’s time use. We find several factors elevate children’s housework hours, including parents’ work/family stress, fathers’ work hours, having more siblings, being female, and being an older child. Contrary to the time availability principle, children’s curricular and extracurricular activities and hours spent in paid labor are associated with more housework. A follow-up analysis suggests that this is not accounted for by an unmeasured family attribute promoting children’s achievement across multiple spheres of activity.

Key Words: housework • children • time use • work/family stress

This version was published on November 1, 2009

Journal of Family Issues, Vol. 30, No. 11, 1459-1485 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0192513X09336647


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C. T. Gager and S. T. Yabiku
Who Has the Time? The Relationship Between Household Labor Time and Sexual Frequency
Journal of Family Issues, February 1, 2010; 31(2): 135 - 163.
[Abstract] [PDF]