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Fathers’ and mothers’ sexism predict less responsive parenting behavior during family interactions Nickola C. Overall, Emily J. Cross, Rachel S. T. Low, Caitlin S. McRae, Annette M. E. Henderson and Valerie T. Chang

By: Overall, Nickola C.
Contributor(s): Cross, Emily J | Low, Rachel S. T | McRae, Caitlin S | Henderson, Annette M. E | Chang, Valerie T.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Social Psychological and Personality Science.Publisher: Sage, 2023Subject(s): ATTITUDES | CHILDREN | FATHERS | MOTHERS | PARENTING | SEXISM | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: DOI: 10.1177/19485506231200296 (Open access) In: Social Psychological and Personality Science, 2023, First published online, 12 October 2023Summary: Men’s hostile sexism predicts harmful behavior toward women. Yet, most investigations have relied on self-report assessments, and overlooked a critical, consequential behavioral outcome: responsive parenting. The current studies provide the first behavioral evidence of the associations between hostile sexism and parenting. Fathers higher in hostile sexism reported lower authoritative (warm, involved) and higher authoritarian (directive, controlling) parenting attitudes (Study 1). Observing mixed-gender couples and their 5-year-old child engaging in family interactions (k = 627), fathers and (unexpectedly) mothers higher in hostile sexism exhibited less responsive parenting irrespective of child gender (Studies 1 and 2). Fathers’ higher hostile sexism also was associated with less responsive behavior toward mothers during family interactions (Studies 1 and 2), but the associations with parenting were independent of couple-level behavior. These studies emphasize the importance of behavioral assessments and advance understanding of the harm both men’s and women’s hostile sexism may have for parents and children. (Authors' abstract). Record #8488
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Social Psychological and Personality Science, 2023, First published online, 12 October 2023

Men’s hostile sexism predicts harmful behavior toward women. Yet, most investigations have relied on self-report assessments, and overlooked a critical, consequential behavioral outcome: responsive parenting. The current studies provide the first behavioral evidence of the associations between hostile sexism and parenting. Fathers higher in hostile sexism reported lower authoritative (warm, involved) and higher authoritarian (directive, controlling) parenting attitudes (Study 1). Observing mixed-gender couples and their 5-year-old child engaging in family interactions (k = 627), fathers and (unexpectedly) mothers higher in hostile sexism exhibited less responsive parenting irrespective of child gender (Studies 1 and 2). Fathers’ higher hostile sexism also was associated with less responsive behavior toward mothers during family interactions (Studies 1 and 2), but the associations with parenting were independent of couple-level behavior. These studies emphasize the importance of behavioral assessments and advance understanding of the harm both men’s and women’s hostile sexism may have for parents and children. (Authors' abstract). Record #8488