Article de revue
Pathogen prevalence is associated with cultural changes in gender equality
Gender equality has varied across time, with dramatic shifts in countries such as the United States in the past several decades. Although differences across societies and changes within societies in gender equality have been well documented, the causes of these changes remain poorly understood. Scholars have posited that such shifts have been driven by specific events (such as Title IX and Roe versus Wade), broader social movements (such as feminism and women’s liberation) or general levels of social development (for example, modernization theory1). Although these factors are likely to have been partly responsible for temporal variations in gender equality, they provide fairly intermediate explanations void of a comprehensive framework. Here, we use an ecological framework to explore the role of key ecological dimensions on change in gender equality over time. We focus on four key types of ecological threats/affordances that have previously been linked to cultural variations in human behaviour as potential
Auteurs
Langues
- Anglais
Année de publication
2016
Journal
Nature Human Behaviour
Volume
3
Type
Article de revue
Catégories
- Prestation de services
Mots-clés
- Genre
- Promotion de la santé