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Contents
- Abstract
- Present Research
- Study 1: Scale Development and EFA
- Method
- Development of initial pool of items
- Participants and procedure
- Measure
- Results
- Study 2: CFA and Construct Validity
- Method
- Participants and procedure
- Measures
- PBS
- Modern Sexism Scale (MS)
- Attitudes Toward Feminism Scale (FEM)
- Attitudes Toward Women Scale (AWS)
- Results
- CFAs
- Construct validity
- Reliability
- Study 3: Measurement Invariance and Demographic Comparison
- Method
- Participants and measures
- Analytic strategy for measurement invariance
- Results
- Measurement invariance across gender
- Mean differences by demographic variables
- General Discussion
- Limitations
- Implications for Research and Practice
- Appendix A
Figures and Tables
Abstract
The purpose of this research was to develop and validate a conceptually and psychometrically solid measure for patriarchal beliefs in samples of U.S. American adults from diverse demographic and geographic backgrounds. In Study 1, we identified 3 correlated factors of the Patriarchal Beliefs Scale (PBS) in data collected from the Internet (N = 279): Institutional Power of Men, Inferiority of Women, and Gendered Domestic Roles. In Study 2, data collected from the Internet (N = 284) supported both an oblique 3-factor structure and a bifactor structure of the PBS, through confirmatory factor analyses. Construct validity of the PBS was supported in relation to other gender-related measures. The PBS was correlated in expected directions with modern sexism, antifeminist attitudes, and egalitarian attitudes toward women. In Study 3, we examined measurement invariance across gender by using combined data from Study 1 and Study 2. All 3 factors of the oblique 3-factor model indicated measurement invariance, whereas the general factor represented in the bifactor model indicated nonequivalence. Mean differences in patriarchal beliefs were found for such demographic variables as gender, sexual orientation, education, and social class. Recommendations for using the PBS, as well as implications for research and practice, are discussed.
In modern U.S. mainstream society, many people tend to view themselves to be progressive and egalitarian in gender relations; thus, patriarchy is often considered as a rather outdated system (Bolzendahl & Meyers, 2004; Kim, 2006). Accordingly, a small number of empirical studies on patriarchy published in the United States tend to focus on specific international, ethnic minority, or religious communities (Abu-Ras,...