Policy as normative influence? On the relationship between parental leave policy and social norms in gender division of childcare across 48 countries

Автор
Дата
2024Редактор
ISSN
2044-8309xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-identifier-citation
Schindler, S., Schuster, C., Olsson, M. I. T., Froehlich, L., Hübner, A.-K., Block, K., Van Laar, C., Schmader, T., Meeussen, L., van Grootel, S., Croft, A., Sun, M. S., Ainsaar, M., Aarntzen, L., Adamus, M., Anderson, J., Atkinson, C., Avicenna, M., Bąbel, P., … Martiny, S. E. (2025). Policy as normative influence? On the relationship between parental leave policy and social norms in gender division of childcare across 48 countries. British Journal of Social Psycholog y, 64, e12806. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjso.12806
Аннотации
In the present work, we addressed the relationship
between parental leave policies and social norms. Using
a pre-registered, cross-national approach, we examined
the relationship between parental leave policies and the
perception of social norms for the gender division of
childcare. In this study, 19,259 students (11,924 women)
from 48 countries indicated the degree to which they
believe childcare is (descriptive norm) and should be
(prescriptive norm) equally divided among mothers
and fathers. Policies were primarily operationalized as
the existence of parental leave options in the respective
country. The descriptive and prescriptive norms of equal
division of childcare were stronger when parental leave was available in a country – also when controlling for potential
confounding variables. Moreover, analyses of time since
policy change suggested that policy change may initially
affect prescriptive norms and then descriptive norms at a
later point. However, due to the cross-sectional nature of
the data, drawing causal inferences is difficult.
Collections
- Psychology[44]
