Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
submittedVersion
Publication Date
8-2018
Abstract
ObjectiveThis study examines how intergenerational coresidence modifies the association between women's education and their household decision‐making power in China.BackgroundPast research on how married women's education increases their decision‐making power at home has focused primarily on nuclear families. This article extends prior research by examining how this association varies by household structure. It compares women living with their husbands with those living with both their husbands and parents‐in‐law.MethodThis article used data from the China Family Panel Studies in 2010 and 2014. It employed marginal structural models to address the concern that certain characteristics selecting women of less power into coresidence with their parents‐in‐law may be endogenous to women's education.ResultsIn nuclear households, women with a higher level of education have a higher probability of having the final say on household decisions. In multigenerational households, however, where women live with their parents‐in‐law, a higher level of education of women is not associated with an increase in women's decision‐making power.ConclusionCoresidence with husbands' parents may undermine the effect of women's education on their household decision‐making power.
Keywords
coresidence, decision-making, education, gender, intergenerational relations, power.
Discipline
Asian Studies | Gender and Sexuality
Research Areas
Sociology
Publication
Journal of Marriage and Family
Volume
81
Issue
1
First Page
115
Last Page
132
ISSN
0022-2445
Identifier
10.1111/jomf.12511
Publisher
Wiley: 12 months
Citation
1
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.