Bootstrap Check
AIplicationLetter

Posts by kamilako (8)

NEW PUBLICATION: Revisiting the STEM Acronym: Toward Conceptual Clarity

Project: Gender Inequality in Retirement

Abstract

We revisit how science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) has been defined, showing that ambiguity continues to complicate our understanding of the concept. Given the widespread use of the STEM acronym, one might assume its meaning was consistent and clear. We demonstrate, however, in four inter-related ways, that STEM’s meaning remains poorly focused and, subsequently, inconsistently applied. We show that the origin story of STEM is contested, that various related acronyms now vie for attention, that operational definitions of STEM are scattered, and that certain STEM-related policy initiatives need more nuance. As evidence for the latter two claims, we rely on a systematic audit of Canadian higher education research on STEM and on a longitudinal review of the gender balance among STEM university graduates. A reconceptualization of STEM’s focus is especially critical, as inconsistency in the acronym’s meaning clouds how research findings can be translated into policy. Policy decisions need to be properly grounded in reproducible evidence. Replication matters to good science and weak definition hampers reproducibility.

Link here

NEW PUBLICATION: Housework sharing among older couples

Project: Gender Inequality in Retirement

Cha, S. E., Suh, J., & Kolpashnikova, K. (2024). Housework sharing among older couples: explaining the gendered division of domestic labour in older age in South Korea. Asian Population Studies, 1-18.


Abstract
Our study investigates the relationship between family models and housework division among older couples. Using the 2019 Korean Time Use Survey, we analysed wives’ share of housework in four family models—dual-earner, traditional (husband-breadwinner), wife-breadwinner, and retired (non-employed) couples—in which at least one partner was aged 65 or above (N = 1,564). Results show that although wives’ housework share varies across the four family models, unequal distribution of housework persists in older age, with wives shouldering over 70 per cent of the total housework regardless of the family model. Wives’ housework share in wife-breadwinner couples was significantly lower than that among dual earners. We also found that economic resources, particularly income, and gender ideology play a limited role in explaining the division of housework among older couples. However, health played a crucial role, with wives and husbands doing more housework when their partners reported poor health.

NEW PUBLICATION: Visualizing Daily Time Use on Housework in Canada: Persistence and Patterns

Project: Time-Use Visualizations

Kolpashnikova, K., Li, Z., & Quesnel-Vallée, A. (2024). Visualizing Daily Time Use on Housework in Canada: Persistence and Patterns. Socius, 10. https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231241257345

Abstract
Housework is a significant part of our daily lives. In this visualization, the authors consider how time spent on housework varies across gender and age throughout the day. Using the nationally representative 2015 Canadian General Social Survey with detailed time diary information, the authors present how women’s and men’s time allocation patterns on housework vary across age groups. The visualization shows that women and older Canadians engaged more in housework. A clear pattern reveals higher engagement during mealtimes, while participation becomes more evenly distributed throughout the day among older adults compared with younger women and men.

About

The HEFT Lab advances social research in health, equity, family, and technology. Committed to ethical and objective studies, we aim to inform policymakers, fellow researchers, and communities, contributing to evidence-based policies and positive societal change. Join us for insights, findings, and meaningful discussions.

Socials