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Original Articles

Gender, the Home-Work Link, and Space-Time Patterns of Nonemployment ActivitiesFootnote

Pages 370-394 | Published online: 22 Oct 2015
 

Abstract

Building upon recent theoretical work on the reconceptualized homework link, this study identifies out-of-home, nonemployment activities as another crucial component of the dynamic dependencies between home and work. Using travel diary data from Columbus, Ohio, and GIS-based three-dimensional visualization techniques, I compare the space-time patterns of these activities for three population subgroups. I examine the complex interrelations among women’s daytime fixity constraint, nonemployment activities, household responsibilities, and employment status using a nonrecursive structural equation model. The results show that women encounter higher levels of daytime fixity constraint than men regardless of their employment status. Such constraint is reduced when there are other adults in the household to share some of the domestic responsibilities. Women who face higher levels of fixity constraint are more likely to work part time. An important implication is that redressing the domestic division of labor and gender relations within the household will not only reduce women’s fixity constraint, but will also improve their labor market position (especially for women currently working part time). One unexpected result is that full-time employed women travel longer distances to work than do men even though they encounter higher levels of fixity constraint. This suggests that, contrary to what past studies often assumed, the journey to work may not reflect the magnitude of the fixity constraint women face in their everyday lives.

Notes

This research was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (SBR-9529780) and the Committee on Urban Affairs, Ohio State University. I would like to thank Susan Hanson, Nancy Ettlinger, and three anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments on earlier versions of the paper.

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