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@book{ Leuze2015,
 title = {Why do girls' and boys' gender-(a)typical occupational aspirations differ across countries? How cultural norms and institutional constraints shape young adolescents' occupational preferences},
 author = {Leuze, Kathrin and Helbig, Marcel},
 year = {2015},
 series = {Discussion Papers / Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung},
 pages = {41},
 volume = {P 2015-002},
 address = {Berlin},
 publisher = {Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung gGmbH},
 abstract = {Occupational sex segregation persists in all European and OECD countries; yet in some countries, it is more pronounced than in others. In this paper we seek to explain these cross-national variations by analyzing the realistic occupational aspirations of 15-year-old pupils in 29 EU and OECD countries. Based on socialization and rational choice approaches we develop hypotheses for how cultural norms and national institutions might influence the gender-typing of occupations. These are tested by applying 2-step multi-level models to the OECD's 2006 PISA study merged with country-level data from various sources. Results indicate that girls develop gender-(a)typical occupational aspirations in response to structural education and labor market differences across countries, while boys' gender-(a)typical aspirations are mainly influenced by country variations in normative prescriptions of gender-essentialist cultures and self-expressive value systems. The findings point at the necessity for differentiating both between micro- and macrolevel explanations and between explanations for women and men. (author's abstract)},
 keywords = {EU; Junge; geschlechtsspezifische Faktoren; career aspiration; international comparison; Berufswunsch; girl; Mädchen; boy; Sozialisation; socialization; internationaler Vergleich; OECD; gender-specific factors; OECD; EU}}