<> "The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license."^^ . <> . . . "Gender Equality and Male-Body Based Contraceptive Use: Evidence from the German Family Panel"^^ . "Background Most available modern contraceptives are female-body based and women predominantly \r\ntake the responsibility for birth control in heterosexual relationships in developed countries. As \r\npreventing unwanted pregnancies is a ‘relationship task’ both partners want to achieve in heterosexual \r\nrelationships, feminized contraceptive responsibility can be conceptualised as ‘fertility work’. Thereby, \r\nit can be connected to the ‘gendered division of labour’. Objective By examining the gendered \r\ndimension of contraceptive behaviour, I address the research gap of considering micro-level gender \r\nequality in form of power dynamics and gender ideology when researching couples’ contraceptive \r\nchoices. It is hypothesized that greater gender equality is related to a higher likelihood of choosing \r\nmodern methods over no or traditional methods, and modern male methods over modern female \r\nmethods. Thereby, it is assumed that modern male methods are connected to lower expenditures like \r\nside-effects than female methods and that using male methods can be conceptualised as ‘sharing’\r\ncontraceptive responsibility. Method Micro-level gender equality is operationalised within power \r\ntheories and gender ideology theory and measured by predictors of interactional, relative and absolute \r\npower and gender ideology. I test each predictor in their relationship to contraceptive behaviour in linear \r\nprobability models with wave 1 data of the German Family Panel ‘pairfam’. Findings Gender equality \r\nconceptualised within power theories and gender ideology theory is significantly associated with a \r\nhigher probability of choosing modern methods over no or traditional methods, and choosing modern \r\nmale methods over modern female methods. Thereby, broader relationship dynamics like the number \r\nof children, relationship commitment and cohort affiliation need to be taken into account."^^ . "2021" . . . . . . . "Katrin"^^ . "Firl"^^ . "Katrin Firl"^^ . . . . . . "Gender Equality and Male-Body Based Contraceptive Use: Evidence from the German Family Panel (Text)"^^ . . . "Master Thesis_Katrin Firl_S4488423.pdf"^^ . . . "Gender Equality and Male-Body Based Contraceptive Use: Evidence from the German Family Panel (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "Gender Equality and Male-Body Based Contraceptive Use: Evidence from the German Family Panel (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "small.jpg"^^ . . . "Gender Equality and Male-Body Based Contraceptive Use: Evidence from the German Family Panel (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "medium.jpg"^^ . . . "Gender Equality and Male-Body Based Contraceptive Use: Evidence from the German Family Panel (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "preview.jpg"^^ . . . "Gender Equality and Male-Body Based Contraceptive Use: Evidence from the German Family Panel (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "lightbox.jpg"^^ . . "HTML Summary of #3586 \n\nGender Equality and Male-Body Based Contraceptive Use: Evidence from the German Family Panel\n\n" . "text/html" . .