The COVID-19 Pandemic and the Gender Gap in Newly Created Domains of Household Labor

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Abstract

In this study, we draw on interview data from 62 matched different-sex, dual-career spouses raising young children to examine the mechanisms behind the gender gap in household labor during the COVID-19 pandemic. We argue that the pandemic represents a unique case of social uncertainty and an opportunity to observe how structural conditions shape the gendered division of household labor. We find that under the rapid social transformation imposed by the pandemic, gender serves as an anchor and orienting frame for couples with young children. We argue that the pandemic (1) expanded traditional gender expectations to new domains of household labor and (2) heightened the importance of gendered explanations for the division of labor that justified intra-couple inequality. Our findings suggest that the particular structural conditions that characterize different times of uncertainty work through slightly different mechanisms, yet produce the same outcome: gender inequality, with long-lasting and wide-ranging implications.

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Abromaviciute, J., & Carian, E. K. (2022). The COVID-19 Pandemic and the Gender Gap in Newly Created Domains of Household Labor. Sociological Perspectives, 65(6), 1169–1187. https://doi.org/10.1177/07311214221103268

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