Gender differences in perception of the appropriate maturity age for men and women: Age norms of reproduction-related life events between the social context and evolutionary foundations
2021
The paper explores gender differences in the perception of appropriate age
for reproduction-related life events. Evolutionary theory suggests that age
norms are shaped by gender-specific evolutionary challenges. We tested two
hypotheses based on the evolutionary rationale. Hypothesis 1 suggests that
both men and women believe that women should reach maturity and experience
reproduction-related life events earlier than men. Hypothesis 2 claims that
men and women demonstrate this tendency asymmetrically. When women estimate
the appropriate/ideal age for men, they suggest a higher appropriate age for
men than men themselves. When men estimate the appropriate/ideal age for
women, they suggest a younger age for women compared to women themselves. In
the second part of the paper, we explored the background of these claims by
testing the alternative explanations based on social forces (culture,
socio-economic status, education, age, values). The hypotheses were tested
using the 9th wave of the European Social Survey (ESS) data, totaling around
47 thousand respondents and the sample of Balkan countries was analyzed in
more detail. The appropriate age was measured using ’ideal age’ as the
concept which reflects the optimal timing expectations for
reproduction-related events: living with a partner, marriage, and
parenthood. Respondents were also asked to make judgments about the
appropriate age of becoming an adult for men and women. The overall results
supported the outlined expectations based on the evolutionary approach.
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