Anne Lise Ellingsæter and Marianne Nordli Hansen: "How does parental time relate to social class in a Nordic welfare state?"

In this article published in Acta Sociologica Anne Lise Ellingsæter, Marianne Nordli Hansen and Ragni Hege Kitterød examine the time spent by parents on childcare activities.

Abstract

Time intensive parenting has spread in Western countries. This study contributes to the literature on parental time use, aiming to deepen our understanding of the relationship between parental childcare time and social class. Based on time-diary data (2010–2011) from Norway, and a concept of social class that links parents’ amount and composition of economic and cultural capital, Anne Lise Ellingsæter, Marianne Nordli Hansen and Ragni Hege Kitterød examine the time spent by parents on childcare activities.

The analysis shows that class and gender intersect: intensive motherhood, as measured by time spent on active childcare, including developmental childcare activities thought to stimulate children's skills, is practised by all mothers. A small group of mothers in the economic upper-middle class fraction spend even more time on childcare than the other mothers.

The time fathers spend on active childcare is less than mothers’, and intra-class divisions are notable. Not only lower-middle class fathers, but also cultural/balanced upper-middle class fathers spend the most time on intensive fathering. Economic upper-middle and working-class fathers spend the least time on childcare. This new insight into class patterns in parents’ childcare time challenges the widespread notion of different cultural childcare logics in the middle class, compared to the working class.

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Published Nov. 30, 2021 10:55 AM - Last modified Nov. 30, 2021 10:55 AM