References
- Alesina, A. & P. Giuliano (2010), “The Power of the Family,” Journal of Economic Growth, 15(2): 93–125.
- Becker, G. (1991), A Treatise on the Family, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
- Bianchi, S., M. Milkie, L.C. Sayer & J.P Robinson (2000), “Is Anyone Doing the Husework? Trends in the Gnder Dvision of Husehold Labor,” Social Forces, 79: 191–228.
- Bittman, M., P. England, L. Sayer, N. Folbre, & G. Matheson (2003), “When Does Gender Trump Money? Bargaining and Time in Household Work,” American Journal of Sociology, 109(1): 186–214.
- Breen, R. & L. P. Cooke (2005), “The Persistence of the Gendered Division of Domestic Labour,” European Sociological Review, 21(1):43–57.
- Brines, J. (1994), “Economic Dependency, Gender and the Division of Labor at Home,” American Journal of Sociology, 100(2): 652–688.
- Brinton, M. (2001), “Married Women's Labor in east Asian Economies” in M. Brinton (ed.), Women's Working Lives in East Asia, California: Stanford University Press.
- Chang, M. (2004), “Growing Pains: Cross-National Variation in Sex Segregation in Sixteen Developing Countries,” American Sociological Review, 69(1): 114–137.
- Chang, M. (2000), “The Evolution of Sex Segregation Regimes,” American Journal of Sociology, 105(6): 1658–1701.
- Chu, C.Y. Cyrus, & R. Yu (2010), Understanding Chinese Families: A Comparative Study of Taiwan and Southeast Asia, New York: Oxford University Press.
- Cohen, P. N. (1998), “Replacing Housework in the Service Economy: Gender, Class, and Race-Ethnicity in Service Spending,” Gender and Society, 12(2): 219–231.
- Coltrane, S. (2000), “Research on Household Labor: Modeling and Measuring the Social Embededness of Routine Family Work,” Journal of Marriage and Family, 62: 1208–1233.
- Cooke, L. P. (2006), “Doing Gender in Context: Household Bargaining and the Risk of Divorce in Germany and the United States,” American Journal of Sociology, 13: 1–27.
- Cooke, L. P. & J. Baxter (2010), “Families in International Context: Comparing Institutional Effects Across Western Societies,” Journal of Marriage and Family, 72: 516–536.
- Esping-Andersen, G. (2007), “Sociological Explanations of Changing Income Distributions,” American Behavioral Scientist, 50(5): 639–658.
- Esping-Andersen, G. (1997), “Hybrid or Unique? the Japanese Welfare State between Europe and America,” Journal of European Social Policy, 7(3): 179–189.
- Evertsson, M. & M. Nermo (2007), “Changing Resources and the Division of Housework: A Longitudinal Study of Swedish Couples,” European Sociological Review, 23(4): 455–470.
- Evertsson, M. & M. Nermo (2004), “Dependence within Families and the Division of Labor: Comparing Sweden and the United States,” Journal of Marriage and Family, 66 (4): 1272–1286.
- Ferree, M. M. (1991), “The Gender Division of Labor in Two-Earner Marriages: Dimensions of Variability and Change,” Journal of Family Issues, 12: 158–180.
- Fuwa, M. (2004), “Macro-Level Gender Inequality and the Division of Household Labor in 22 Countries,” American Sociological Review, 69(6): 751–767.
- Fuwa, M. & P. Cohen (2007), “Housework and Social Policy,” Social Science Research, 36: 512–530.
- Gray, A. (2005). “The Changing Availability of Grandparents as Carers and its Implication for Childcare Policy in the UK,” Journal of Social Policy, 34(4): 557–577.
- Greenstein, T. (2000), “Economic Dependence, Gender, and the Division of Labor in the Home: A Replication and Extension,” Journal of Marriage and Family, 62: 322–335.
- Gupta, S. (2007), “Autonomy, Dependence or Display? The Relationship between Married Women's Earnings and Housework,” Journal of Marriage and Family, 69: 399–417.
- Hsieh, M. (2011), “Similar Opportunities, Different Responses: Explaining the Divergent Patterns of Development between Taiwan and South Korea,” International Sociology, 26(3): 364–391.
- Killewald, A. & M. Gough (2010), “Money Isn't Everything: Wives' Earnings and Housework Time,” Social Science Research, 39: 987–1003.
- Kim, Y. M. & S. Shirahase (2011), “A Comparative Study of Gender Inequality in East Asia: Decomposition of Cross-national Difference in Gender Earnings Gap,” paper presented at the Korean Sociological Association Annual Meeting, June, Daejun, Korea.
- Knudsen, K. & K. Waerness (2008), “National Context and Spouses' Housework in 34 Countries,” European Sociological Review, 24(1): 97–113.
- Koyano, W. (2000), “Filial Piety, Co-residence, and Intergenerational Solidarity in Japan” in W. T. Liu & H. Kendig (eds.), Who Should Care for the Elderly?: An East-West Value Divide, Singapore: Singapore University Press.
- Lundberg, S. & R. Pollack (1996), “Bargaining and Distribution in Marriage,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, 10(4): 139–158.
- Oh, J. H. (2009), “The Mother-Daughter Relationship and Empowerment in the Writing of Korean-American Women,” Asian Journal of Women's Studies, 15(2): 33–61.
- Osawa, M. (1994), “Bye-bye Corporate Warriors: The Formation of a Corporate-Centered Society and Gender-Biased Social Policies in Japan,” Annals of the Institute of Social Science, 35: 157–194.
- Parish, W., L. Hao & D. Hogan (1991), “Family Support Networks, Welfare, and Work among Young Mothers,” Journal of Marriage and Family, 53(1): 203–215.
- Peng, I. & J. Wong (2008), “Institutions and Institutional Purpose: Continuity and Change in East Asian Policy,” Politics and Society, 36(1): 61–88.
- Stier, H. & N. Lewin-Epstein (2007), “Policy Effects on the Division of Housework,” Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis, 9(3): 235–259.
- Thebaud, S. (2010), “Masculinity, Bargaining and Breadwinning: Understanding Men's Housework in the Cultural Context of Paid Work,” Gender and Society, 24(3): 330–354.
- Tobio, C. (2001), “Working and Mothering: Women's Strategies in Spain,” European Societies, 3(3): 339–371.
- Usdansky, M. (2011), “The Gender Equality Paradox: Class and the Incongruity between Work-Family Attitudes and Behaviors,” Journal of Family Theory and Review, 3: 168–178.
- West, C. & D. Zimmerman (1987), “Doing Gender,” Gender and Society, 1(2): 125–151.
- West, C. & S. Fenstermaker (1995), “Doing Difference,” Gender and Society,9(1): 8–37.
- Yu, W. H. (2009), Gendered Trajectories: Women, Work, and Social Change in Japan and Taiwan, California: Stanford University Press.
- Yu, W. H. (2005), “Changes in Women's Postmarital Employment in Japan and Taiwan,” Demography, 42(4): 693–717.