Posts Tagged ‘gender’

Matt Desmond on Foreclosures in the NY Times

February 19, 2010

SOURCE: NY Times

Great to see Matt Desmond’s research featured in the Times. I can’t remember the last time the unpublished research of a sociology grad student  received that level of attention. Maybe Devah Pager?

Also available from the NY Times, a slide show, called Home No More.

Women watch the Super Bowl, too. Right?

February 8, 2010

According to AdWeek, about 45% of the viewers of last year’s Super Bowl were women. Unless something strange happens, I imagine that percentage will probably be about the same for 2010. However, you wouldn’t know it from watching the ads. Maybe it’s the “man-cession.” Or maybe American masculine identity is in crisis. Whatever it was, the marketing message last night seemed to be all about men. Here are a few samples:

Debate on Alpha Wives

January 25, 2010

Building off the coverage of the Pew Study and a number of articles in the NY Times and elsewhere, the Times hosted a debate yesterday called “Alpha Wives: The Trend and the Truth“ that featured a terrific group of social scientists that included Stephanie Coontz, Kathleen Gerson, Andrew Cherlin, and Claudia Goldin.

Economica: Women and the Global Economy

October 28, 2009

(h/t J.D.) The International Museum of Women has a new online exhibit called “Economica” about the experiences  of women in the global economy. The site features podcasts, slideshows, and forums on gender and globalization. In particular, I’d recommend checking out their list of films. It’s a terrific resource. The “Your Voices” section is also interesting.

Upstate Girls by Kenneally

October 13, 2009

Check out the profile of photographer Brenda Ann Kenneally in the NY Times Lens Blog:

The searing photographs in “Upstate Girls” have brought her prestigious awards, including a Canon Female Photojournalist Award, a Getty Images Grant for Editorial Photography and first prize for stories about daily life, from World Press Photo.

Not content simply to photograph her subjects’ tattered lives, Ms. Kenneally is trying to help girls who have run afoul of the legal system, as she did. She is working on a graphic novel that will include her photographs, and she has started workshops in which girls make scrapbooks to help them think about their lives and choices they can make.

With the filmaker MacGregor Thomson, Ms. Kenneally is editing a series of minidocumentaries on the girls. She has also relaunched her Web site, Upstate Girls, produced by Steven Zeswitz. She is trying to raise money for these projects while also studying for a Ph.D. in electronic media at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Women affected disproportionately by climate change?

October 1, 2009

Treehugger has an interesting post on helping poor women deal with climate change. The blog includes  links to several organizations advocating for women’s rights around the world. Since the majority of people living under the poverty line are women and the poor are hurt the most by climate change, it makes sense for the Clinton Initiative and Oxfam to focus on helping poor women deal with environmental disaster.

According to Treehugger and the  Girl Effect Campaign:

There’s strong evidence to suggest that investing in women’s empowerment and education also yields disproportionate returns. For example, when a woman earns income, she invests more than 90% back into her family, compared to only 30-40% for a man. Yet as Brian noted in his post on the CGI, only 1% of funding given to developing countries is given to women.

Oxfam is also participating in this initiative. Their Sisters on the Planet Campaign is  ”highlighting women around the world who are actively involved in empowering their communities and fighting climate change.” They have created videos profiling women, such as Sahena from Bangladesh to show “how women can not only empower themselves to help their communities, but how that empowerment creates a wider cultural shift toward inclusion and respect for women.”

Cherlin, Cohen, and Regnerus on early marriage

September 22, 2009

Philip Cohen’s recent post about new research showing that states with more religious populations had higher teenage birth rates reminded me of a terrific article in The New Yorker by Margaret Talbot from last year. Talbot contrasts the different trends in families in red states and blue states. In the article, she interviews family-law scholars, Naomi Cahn, of George Washington University, and June Carbone, of the University of Missouri at Kansas City. They argue that “’red families’ and ‘blue families’ are ‘living different lives, with different moral imperatives.’

“The ‘blue states’ of the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic have lower teen birthrates, higher use of abortion, and lower percentages of teen births within marriage,” Cahn and Carbone observe. They also note that people start families earlier in red states—in part because they are more inclined to deal with an unplanned pregnancy by marrying rather than by seeking an abortion. . . . Of all variables, the age at marriage may be the pivotal difference between red and blue families. . . . The red-state model puts couples at greater risk for divorce; women who marry before their mid-twenties are significantly more likely to divorce than those who marry later. And younger couples are more likely to be contending with two of the biggest stressors on a marriage: financial struggles and the birth of a baby before, or soon after, the wedding.

Divorce Rates


Highest Lowest
Nevada Illinois
Arkansas Massachusetts
Wyoming Iowa
Idaho Minnesota
West Virginia New Jersey

Teen-pregnancy Rates


Highest Lowest
Nevada North Dakota
Arizona Vermont
Mississippi New Hampshire
New Mexico Minnesota
Texas Maine

Median Age at Marriage

Lowest

Highest
Utah Massachusetts
Oklahoma New York
Idaho Rhode Island
Arkansas Connecticut
Kentucky New Jersey


Both Cohen and Talbot highlight work by Mark Regnerus. Talbot’s article features his analysis of data drawn from of a survey that he did of thirty-four hundred thirteen-to-seventeen-year-olds and from a comprehensive government study of adolescent health known as Add Health. According to Talbot:

Regnerus argues that religion is a good indicator of attitudes toward sex, but a poor one of sexual behavior, and that this gap is especially wide among teen-agers who identify themselves as evangelical. The vast majority of white evangelical adolescents—seventy-four per cent—say that they believe in abstaining from sex before marriage.” However, “according to Add Health data, evangelical teen-agers are more sexually active than Mormons, mainline Protestants, and Jews. On average, white evangelical Protestants make their “sexual début”—to use the festive term of social-science researchers—shortly after turning sixteen. Among major religious groups, only black Protestants begin having sex earlier.

Not only are evangelical teens having sex earlier, but they are also less likely to use contraception, which would explain those high teen-pregnancy rates and also low median ages for marriage. Since virginity pledges and other evangelical strategies clearly aren’t working, Regnerus proposes that couples should get married younger instead. In an op-ed in the Washington Post, Regnerus argues that couples should marry early for many reasons including fertility, the ability to pool resources, and environmental sustainability. He also believes that “Marriage actually works best as a formative institution, not an institution you enter once you think you’re fully formed. We learn marriage, just as we learn language, and to the teachable, some lessons just come easier earlier in life.”

Mark raises some unexpected arguments in his op-ed, but there have also been some reasonable criticisms. Andy Cherlin highlights that the fertility benefit of marrying early is a relic of our pre-industrial era. There are very few benefits to having a large family today. In fact, many folks don’t see any benefit to having children at all. In his Huffington Post piece, Philip Cohen explains that Regnerus is “teaching to the choir.” He argues that most evangelicals are already encouraging earlier marriage (see covenant marriage policies, for example). Cohen writes:

I believe the truth is that, across the board — even among Christians, the poor, and poor Christians — the standards for marriage have increased as it has become less necessary for survival. I think that’s why people marry later and divorce more than they used to, but see no reason to postpone sex. Regnerus’s attempt to lower the bar for marriage — “weddings may be beautiful, but marriages become beautiful” — is probably futile

Cohen on Sex-stratified Sports and Gender after Semenya

September 3, 2009

I’ve been fascinated by the debate swirling around track athlete Semenya Caster. Philip Cohen has put together a cogent essay on Huffington Post that is full of interesting links to the debate about dividing sports competitions by gender and the role intersex athletes. Ultimately, Cohen comes out on the side of keeping competition divided by gender:

Where to draw the line — or how to fit a line over the curve of human variation? I’m not expert on the science of the sex continuum, but I think that given the gap in ability between the top men and even the “suspect” top women, the fair place to draw the line is way over toward the male end of female. That might seem unfair to some of the other female competitors, but in this case they’ve been complaining even though Semenya hasn’t even broken the women’s record — she’s just faster than them. So I have little sympathy.

Unless we find intersex domination of “female” sporting events, I think the risk of giving them an advantage is the price we should pay, since the alternative is forcing women with some ambiguous hormonal advantage to run with the top men, against whom they would lose, and thus effectively excluding them from top competition. And that would just add injury to insult.

Kimmel and Boushey on the Recession and Women as Breadwinners

August 27, 2009

NPR’s Tell Me More interviewed Michael Kimmel and Heather Boushey about a recent study from the Center for American Progress that found that 3 out of 4 of the people being laid-off in this recession are men. They discuss what it means when women are the sole-breadwinner in a family, since women continue to get unequal pay for doing the same jobs as men.

Boushey and the Center for American Progress has put together this interactive graphic looking at lay-offs by gender.

SOURCE: Center for American Progress

SOURCE: Center for American Progress

New survey from Brian Powell: “most Americans think a woman should take her husband’s last name”

August 17, 2009

Saw this brief article in the Chicago Tribune featuring research by Indiana University’s Brian Powell. I have to confess I was surprised by the results:

Over 70 percent of Americans report that wives should change their last names to their husband’s when they get married.

I would have guessed that it was 60% or lower at this point. Partners with multiple last names seem so conventional now. Maybe I’ve been living in a blue state too long. . .