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  2. Fertility factor (demography) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fertility_factor_(demography)

    Furthermore, these attitudes tend to hold across the life course, and boil down to three main types: career-oriented, family-oriented, and a combination of both work and family. Research shows that family-oriented women have the most children, and work-oriented women have the least, or none at all, although causality remains unclear.

  3. Marianismo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marianismo

    Often women are portrayed as either those who adhere to the feminine ideal, and those who do not. These women are then categorized as good women and bad women, respectively. These "good women" are seen as nurturing, family-oriented, soft-spoken, even-tempered and sexually naïve, whereas the "bad women" are often the sexual targets of men.

  4. Femininity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Femininity

    Second-wave feminists, influenced by de Beauvoir, believed that although biological differences between females and males were innate, the concepts of femininity and masculinity had been culturally constructed, with traits such as passivity and tenderness assigned to women and aggression and intelligence assigned to men.

  5. Feminine style of management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feminine_style_of_management

    In 2005, a year-long study conducted by Caliper, a Princeton, New Jersey–based management consulting firm, and Aurora, a London-based organization that advances women, identified a number of characteristics that distinguish women leaders from men when it comes to qualities of leadership: [12]

  6. Ideal womanhood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideal_womanhood

    A great deal of writing has been done on the subject. The subject of the Ideal Woman has been treated humorously, [9] [10] theologically, [11] and musically. [12] Examples of "ideal women" are portrayed in literature, for example: Sophie, a character in Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Emile: or, On Education (book V) who is raised to be the perfect ...

  7. Nancy Chodorow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Chodorow

    Chodorow was born to a Jewish family on January 20, 1944, in New York City, New York. [9] Her parents were Marvin Chodorow , a professor of applied physics , and Leah Chodorow (née Turitz), a community activist who helped establish the Stanford Village Nursery School and served as its first parents board president.

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  9. History of the family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_family

    Family types of pre-industrial Europe belonged into two basic groups, the "simple household system" (the nuclear family), and the "joint family system" (the extended family). [34] A simple household system featured a relatively late age of marriage for both men and women and the establishment of a separate household after the marriage or ...