Higher Levels of Masculine Gender Role Stress in Masculine than in Feminine Nations: A Thirteen-Nations Study

W. A. Arrindell*, Sonja van Well, Annemarie M. Kolk, Dick P. H. Barelds, Tian P. S. Oei, Pui Yi Lau, Cultural Clinical Psychology Study

*Bijbehorende auteur voor dit werk

    OnderzoeksoutputAcademicpeer review

    15 Citaten (Scopus)

    Samenvatting

    It was hypothesized that societies that put greater emphasis on men being rigidly committed to culturally accepted models of masculinity (nations with high Hofstede MASculinity scores) would report higher mean national levels of masculine gender role stress (MGRS) than societies that emphasize such to a clearly lesser extent (low national MAS scores). Supporting this expectation, a large country-level correlation of +.64 (p = .01) was found across 13 countries (n = 6,420) between national MAS scores and national MGRS scores. In line with previous findings, Hofstede's MAS measure was found to be conceptually distinct from Bem's measure of instrumentality. Implications for intervention and further studies are briefly pinpointed.

    Originele taal-2English
    Pagina's (van-tot)51-67
    Aantal pagina's17
    TijdschriftCross-Cultural Research
    Volume47
    Nummer van het tijdschrift1
    DOI's
    StatusPublished - feb.-2013

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