Volume 53 - Article 17 | Pages 511–524
Gendered adolescent time use in Japan, Korea, Finland, and the United Kingdom across three decades
demographic-research.53-17 (zip file, 6 kB)
readme.53-17 (text file, 728 Byte)
Abstract
Background: Little is known about gendered adolescent time allocation across East Asian and Western contexts across time. East Asian societies have distinct Confucian-based parenting practices and time use. Examining these contexts helps us understand factors contributing to adult gender inequality and the levels of universalisation or divergence in time patterns.
Methods: Using harmonised time diaries, we examine the gendered differences in time spent on sleep/personal care, education, TV/radio, general leisure, sports/exercise, and domestic work in South Korea, Japan, the United Kingdom, and Finland across three decades (1985–1990, 1991–2000, 2001–2010).
Results: There are minimal gender gaps in sleep/personal care and education. Globally, girls spend more time on domestic work, and there is a rise in general leisure across decades, but gender gaps have not narrowed across time. Gender gaps in East Asia are most pronounced in sports/exercise and leisure, but gender gaps in domestic work are larger in Western societies. Over time, the gender gaps in East Asia remain stable, showing slower progress than in Western contexts.
Conclusions: Across contexts, gender gaps are smallest in ‘essential’ activities, but there are distinct gender gaps in East Asian and Western contexts. The persistent gender gaps in East Asia across time reflect persistent adult gender inequality, but we find that gender gaps are not necessarily smaller in more gender-equal societies.
Contribution: We contribute findings about adolescents’ time use in East Asian and Western contexts, which is rarely studied due to data limitations. We also extend previous work by using contexts over three decades.
Author’s Affiliation
- Grace Chang - University of Oxford, United Kingdom EMAIL
- Man-Yee Kan - University of Oxford, United Kingdom EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
The gender gap in the United States: Housework across racialized groups
Volume 43 - Article 36
Housework share and fertility preference in four East Asian countries in 2006 and 2012
Volume 41 - Article 35
A new family equilibrium? Changing dynamics between the gender division of labor and fertility in Great Britain, 1991–2017
Volume 40 - Article 50
Domestic division of labour and fertility preference in China, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan
Volume 36 - Article 18
Similar articles in Demographic Research
Non-intact families and adolescents’ family satisfaction during the Second Demographic Transition: A test of the institutionalization hypothesis
Volume 54 - Article 21
| Keywords:
adolescence,
divorce,
families,
family structure,
parental separation,
satisfaction,
single-parent families,
union dissolution
Harmonised fertility histories in four British longitudinal cohort studies
Volume 54 - Article 18
| Keywords:
cohort studies,
fertility,
harmonised data,
United Kingdom
Academic expectations and university enrolment of migrant-origin students in Italy: Evidence by migrant generation and origin group
Volume 54 - Article 10
| Keywords:
academic expectations,
academic expectations,
age at arrival,
citizenship,
Italy,
university enrolment
Learning and reproductive health: Do early cognitive skills contribute to better sexual and reproductive health outcomes among adolescents in Ethiopia?
Volume 54 - Article 7
| Keywords:
adolescence,
education,
education,
Ethiopia,
fertility,
sub-Saharan Africa
The scale of transnational family separation: Evidence from the United Kingdom
Volume 53 - Article 39
| Keywords:
1.5 generation,
family reunification,
left-behind children,
left-behind children,
transnational separation,
United Kingdom
Cited References: 32
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar