TY - JOUR PY - 1982// TI - Sex-role expectations, power, and psychological distress JO - Sex roles A1 - Horwitz, Allan V. SP - 607 EP - 623 VL - 8 IS - 6 N2 - Data collected in a community survey of psychiatric epidemiology in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1967 are reanalyzed to examine the relationship of sex-role expectations and power to rates of psychological distress. The results indicate that people who occupy powerful roles have low rates of distress, regardless of whether they conform to or deviate from role expectations. The occupation of the powerless role, however, is particularly productive of distress when the occupant of this role deviates from sex-appropriate behavior. The findings suggest that sex differences in distress may in part be deducible from more general differences in power and role expectations.
LA - en SN - 0360-0025 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00289895 ID - ref1 ER -