Ambivalent Sexism and Relationship Patterns among Women and Men in Ukraine |
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Authors: | Oksana Yakushko |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Educational Psychology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 235 Teachers College Hall, P.O. Box 880345, Lincoln, Nebraska, 68588-0345
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Abstract: | The present study was designed to examine the ambivalent sexist attitudes toward women and men in a sample of Ukrainian college students and young professionals. Findings support previous theoretical assertions that in reaction to current trends toward cultural remasculinization, Eastern European women may hold attitudes similar to women in other cultures marked by gender inequality (Glick & Fiske, 2001). As predicted, Ukrainian women were found to hold stronger benevolent sexist attitudes about their own gender roles and more hostile attitudes toward men than were their male counterparts. In addition, benevolent and hostile attitudes about the genders held by both women and men were related to negative relationship attitudes such as fear of intimacy, and anxious or avoidant attachments for both genders. |
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