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Maternal employment and fatherhood: what influences paternal involvement in child-care work in Uganda?

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Gender & Development

Volume
17
Issue
2
Theme
Work
Publication Date
Jul 2009
Author(s)
Apollo Nkwake
Editor (s)
Caroline Sweetman
Publisher:
Gender & Development is published for Oxfam GB by Routledge
ISSN:
1355-2074
E-ISSN:
1364-9221
STOCK CODE:
002J1407
FORMAT:
PDF (pp.12)
Link to PDF
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Abstract


Two hundred and twenty-two working fathers with working wives and 246 working mothers with working husbands were randomly sampled and interviewed to ascertain the circumstances under which fathers in Uganda are getting involved in child-care tasks (which traditionally in Uganda are a women's domain) as a result of increasing maternal involvement in paid employment. Paternal confidence and motivation, access to paternity leave, shorter work time requirements, harmony in marital relationships, and higher education levels, have a positive influence on fathers' involvement in child-care while wife's employment and wealth have a negative influence.

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