One egalitarianism or several? Two decades of gender-role attitude change in Europe

CR Knight, MC Brinton - american Journal of Sociology, 2017 - journals.uchicago.edu
american Journal of Sociology, 2017journals.uchicago.edu
This article challenges the implicit assumption of many cross-national studies that gender-
role attitudes fall along a single continuum between traditional and egalitarian. The authors
argue that this approach obscures theoretically important distinctions in attitudes and
renders analyses of change over time incomplete. Using latent class analysis, they
investigate the multidimensional nature of gender-role attitudes in 17 postindustrial
European countries. They identify three distinct varieties of egalitarianism that they …
This article challenges the implicit assumption of many cross-national studies that gender-role attitudes fall along a single continuum between traditional and egalitarian. The authors argue that this approach obscures theoretically important distinctions in attitudes and renders analyses of change over time incomplete. Using latent class analysis, they investigate the multidimensional nature of gender-role attitudes in 17 postindustrial European countries. They identify three distinct varieties of egalitarianism that they designate as liberal egalitarianism, egalitarian familism, and flexible egalitarianism. They show that while traditional gender-role attitudes have precipitously and uniformly declined in accordance with the “rising tide” narrative toward greater egalitarianism, the relative prevalence of different egalitarianisms varies markedly across countries. Furthermore, they find that European nations are not converging toward one dominant egalitarian model but rather, remain differentiated by varieties of egalitarianism.
The University of Chicago Press