Scheduled maintenance

The RELX SDG Resource Centre is scheduled for maintenance on 16th July 2026. There may be a short period of downtime, expected to last no longer than 2 hours at some point during the day.

 

Thank you for your patience while we complete this work.

 

Gender inequality in workloads explained by operational sex ratio

Elsevier, iScience, Volume 27, 21 June 2024
Authors: 
Chen Y., Ge E., Zhou L., Du J., Mace R.

Ecological differences between human populations can affect the relative strength of sexual selection, and hence drive gender inequality. Here, we exploit the cultural diversity of southwestern China, where some village sex ratios are female-biased, in part due to a proportion of males entering monastic celibacy, to evaluate the role of sex ratio on the sexual division of labor. We used a detachable activity tracker to measure workload by step counts in both sexes among 561 individuals in 55 villages in six different areas. We show that a lower sex ratio and a higher prevalence of monasticism are associated with higher women's workloads and reduced men's workloads in the non-celibate population. As the operational sex ratio increases, gender inequality diminishes. This study offers valuable insights into the origins of gender disparities by examining the role of sex ratio on the sexual division of labor.