Explaining differences in gender role attitudes among migrant and native adolescents in Germany: intergenerational transmission religiosity, and integration

被引:49
作者
Kretschmer, David [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Mannheim, Mannheim Ctr European Social Res MZES, Mannheim, Germany
关键词
Gender role attitudes; transmission; integration; native-migrant differences; Germany; VALUE DISCREPANCIES; IMMIGRANT FAMILIES; VALUES; SEX; SOCIALIZATION; NETHERLANDS; IDEOLOGY; LABOR; PREDICTORS; DAUGHTERS;
D O I
10.1080/1369183X.2017.1388159
中图分类号
C921 [人口统计学];
学科分类号
摘要
This study examines gender role attitudes of native and migrant adolescents in Germany and attempts to explain why adolescents of Turkish, former Yugoslavian, and Eastern European origin tend to have more traditional attitudes than their native peers. In order to do so, it combines a migrant-native comparative approach that highlights the impact of religiosity and host society integration with an intergenerational transmission perspective that emphasises the continuity of gender role attitudes across generations. The empirical analysis relies on dyadic parent-adolescent data (N = 2744) from the first wave of the Children of Immigrants Longitudinal Survey in Four European Countries. It demonstrates the importance of incorporating intergenerational transmission processes to fully understand attitude differences between natives and migrants: a substantial part of native-migrant gaps in gender role attitudes can be attributed to migrant parents' more traditional attitudes and a strong transmission of attitudes across generations. Once intergenerational transmission and the influence of religiosity and integration have been accounted for, the remaining differences between gender role attitudes of native and migrant adolescents are small.
引用
收藏
页码:2197 / 2218
页数:22
相关论文
共 59 条
[1]   East-West differences in attitudes about employment and family in Germany [J].
Adler, MA ;
Brayfield, A .
SOCIOLOGICAL QUARTERLY, 1996, 37 (02) :245-260
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1981, Cultural transmission and evolution: A quantitative approach
[3]  
[Anonymous], COMP SOCIOLOGY
[4]  
Bandura A., 1977, Social learning theory
[5]   Tracking the Latino Gender Gap: Gender Attitudes across Sex, Borders, and Generations [J].
Bejarano, Christina E. ;
Manzano, Sylvia ;
Montoya, Celeste .
POLITICS & GENDER, 2011, 7 (04) :521-549
[6]   The transformation of US gender role attitudes: cohort replacement, social-structural change, and ideological learning [J].
Brooks, C ;
Bolzendahl, C .
SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH, 2004, 33 (01) :106-133
[7]   Life Course Stage in Young Adulthood and Intergenerational Congruence in Family Attitudes [J].
Bucx, Freek ;
Raaijmakers, Quinten ;
van Wel, Frits .
JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY, 2010, 72 (01) :117-134
[8]   Parent and adolescent gender role attitudes in 1990s Great Britain [J].
Burt, KB ;
Scott, J .
SEX ROLES, 2002, 46 (7-8) :239-245
[9]   Family Structure and the Intergenerational Transmission of Gender Ideology [J].
Carlson, Daniel L. ;
Knoester, Chris .
JOURNAL OF FAMILY ISSUES, 2011, 32 (06) :709-734
[10]  
Charles Maria, 2004, Occupational Ghettos: the Worldwide Segregation of Women and Men