ISSP1994: Family and Changing Gender Roles II

The fourth of 20 years of International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) surveys within New Zealand by Professor Philip Gendall, Department of Marketing, Massey University.A verbose rundown on topics covered follows.The significance of family and changing sex roles. Attitude to employment of women (scale); attitude to role distribution of man and woman; importance of personal employment; preferred extent of employment of women during various stages of child raising; preferred measures to care for babies of working couples; attitude to partnership, marriage and divorce; attitude to single fathers and mothers; ideal number of children; attitude to children (scale); preference for divorce or continuation of a disturbed marriage.Employment of mother during childhood of respondent; today’s contact with mother; personal divorces; earlier divorce of present partner; marital status of respondent; attitude to paid maternity leave; judgement on financial support when both partners work; attitude to abortion; attitude to pre-marital sexual relations and sexual relations of young people under 16 years; attitude to extra-marital sexual relations and homosexual relations.Personal effect of sexual harassment at work; partner or respondent as manager of household income; division of housework between man and woman (scale); employment of both spouses and income differences; extent of employment during various stages of child raising; living together with a partner; employment in civil service; time worked each week; superior function; religiousness; self-classification of social class; union membership; party preference.

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Additional Info

Field Value
Theme
Author Philip Gendall (1229910)
Maintainer
Source https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/ISSP1994_Family_amp_Changing_Gender_Roles_II/2000919
Source Created 2015-06-18T23:19:14Z
Source Modified 2015-06-18T23:19:14
Language English
Spatial
Source Identifier 10.17608/k6.auckland.2000919.v5
Dataset metadata created 1 August 2019, last updated 28 March 2025