Are sexist attitudes and gender stereotypes linked? A critical feminist approach with a Spanish sample

Date

2019-10-24

Authors

García Sánchez, Rubén
Almendros, Carmen
Aramayona, Begoña
Martín, María J.
Martínez, José M.

Director

Publisher

Frontiers
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión publicada / Argitaratu den bertsioa

Project identifier

Impacto
No disponible en Scopus

Abstract

This study aims to verify the psychometric properties of the Spanish versions of the Social Roles Questionnaire (SRQ; Baber and Tucker, 2006), Modern Sexism Scale (MS), and Old-Fashioned Sexism Scale (OFS; Swim et al., 1995; Swim and Cohen, 1997). Enough support was found to maintain the original factor structure of all instruments in their Spanish version. Differences between men and women in the scores are commented on, mainly because certain sexist attitudes have been overcome with greater success in the current Spanish society, while other issues, such as distribution of power in organizational hierarchies or distribution of tasks in the household, where traditional unequal positions are still maintained. In all cases, it was found that men showed greater support for sexist attitudes. The correlations between the three instruments were as expected in assessing sexist attitudes that tend to relate to each other. Eventually, we found no empirical evidence for the postulated link between sexist attitudes and traditional gender stereotypes. Our results call for the validity and effectiveness of the classic theories of gender psychology, such as gender schema theories (Bem, 1981; Markus et al., 1982) and the notion of a gender belief system (Deaux and Kite, 1987; Kite, 2001).

Description

Keywords

Sexism, Gender stereotype, Psychometric properties, Invariance, Spanish men and women

Department

Ciencias de la Salud / Osasun Zientziak

Faculty/School

Degree

Doctorate program

item.page.cita

García-Sánchez, R., Almendros, C., Aramayona, B., Martín, M.J., Soria-Oliver, M., López, J.S., Martínez, J.M. (2019) Are sexist attitudes and gender stereotypes linked? a critical feminist approach with a Spanish sample. Frontiers in Psychology, 10(OCT). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02410

item.page.rights

© 2019 García-Sánchez, Almendros, Aramayona, Martín, Soria-Oliver, López and Martínez. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).

Licencia

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