Export Publication

The publication can be exported in the following formats: APA (American Psychological Association) reference format, IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) reference format, BibTeX and RIS.

Export Reference (APA)
Santos, M. H., Rosa, M., Correia, R. & Xavier, E. (2021). Gender roles and dynamics in COVID-19 times: Changes and continuities in sharing arrangements of housework and caregiving. Psicologia. 35 (1), 147-156
Export Reference (IEEE)
M. H. Santos et al.,  "Gender roles and dynamics in COVID-19 times: Changes and continuities in sharing arrangements of housework and caregiving", in Psicologia, vol. 35, no. 1, pp. 147-156, 2021
Export BibTeX
@article{santos2021_1716163425656,
	author = "Santos, M. H. and Rosa, M. and Correia, R. and Xavier, E.",
	title = "Gender roles and dynamics in COVID-19 times: Changes and continuities in sharing arrangements of housework and caregiving",
	journal = "Psicologia",
	year = "2021",
	volume = "35",
	number = "1",
	doi = "10.17575/psicologia.v35i1.1688",
	pages = "147-156",
	url = "https://revista.appsicologia.org/index.php/rpsicologia/about"
}
Export RIS
TY  - JOUR
TI  - Gender roles and dynamics in COVID-19 times: Changes and continuities in sharing arrangements of housework and caregiving
T2  - Psicologia
VL  - 35
IS  - 1
AU  - Santos, M. H.
AU  - Rosa, M.
AU  - Correia, R.
AU  - Xavier, E.
PY  - 2021
SP  - 147-156
SN  - 0874-2049
DO  - 10.17575/psicologia.v35i1.1688
UR  - https://revista.appsicologia.org/index.php/rpsicologia/about
AB  - This paper intends to understand the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on shared unpaid work
between men and women living as a couple during the confinement, to assess whether this situation
influenced family dynamics, especially when professional status changed to teleworking. With this goal,
weekly hours spent in housework and caregiving, perceptions of justice about sharing arrangements, and
the impact of COVID in the housework and caregiving workload were analyzed, in a sample of 128 workingage participants, living as a couple, and mostly in telework (58%). The asymmetries identified in recent literature were also found in our study, particularly for couples with underage children. Women reported doing much more work than it would be fair, both in household and caregiving tasks. Parents reported a workload increase in caregiving tasks, compared to participants without children, independently of sex.
ER  -