Authors
Mariana Brussoni, Lise L Olsen, Genevieve Creighton, John L Oliffe
Publication date
2013/10
Journal
Qualitative health research
Volume
23
Issue
10
Pages
1388-1398
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
Injuries are a leading cause of child death, and safety interventions frequently target mothers. Fathers are largely ignored despite their increasing childcare involvement. In our qualitative study with 18 Canadian heterosexual couples parenting children 2 to 7 years old, we examined dyadic decision making and negotiations related to child safety and risk engagement in recreational activities. Parents viewed recreation as an important component of men’s childcare, but women remained burdened with mundane tasks. Most couples perceived men as being more comfortable with risk than women, and three negotiation patterns emerged: fathers as risk experts; mothers countering fathers’ risk; and fathers acknowledging mothers’ safety concerns but persisting in risk activities. Our findings suggest that contemporary involved fathering practices privilege men in the outdoors and can erode women’s control for protecting …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Brussoni, LL Olsen, G Creighton, JL Oliffe - Qualitative health research, 2013