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How Germany cleans : Housework between social norms and sustainability / C. Thunig in SOFW JOURNAL, Vol. 149, N° 6 (06/2023)
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Titre : How Germany cleans : Housework between social norms and sustainability Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : C. Thunig, Auteur ; B. Glassl, Auteur ; K. Kumposcht, Auteur ; S. Morris-Piou, Auteur Année de publication : 2023 Article en page(s) : p. 36-39 Note générale : Bibliogr. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Hygiène
Nettoyage
Tâches ménagèresIndex. décimale : 668.1 Agents tensioactifs : savons, détergents Résumé : Housework is much more than “just cleaning”. The way cleaning is done allows conclusions to be drawn about social norms, behavioural patterns, the current emotional state and about the state of society. In this context, the Industrieverband Körperpflege- und Waschmittel e. V. (German Cosmetic, Toiletry, Perfumery and Detergent Association, IKW) commissioned a study from INNOFACT AG that examined the topic of housework from a holistic perspective. Note de contenu : - How the topic of cleaning is anchored in people's minds : Lessons learnt – children’s help in the household
- Imprinting and motivation - cleaning has an emotional component
- Social norms : The understanding of roles changes slowly : Sharing household care : Younger people and East Germans distribute housework
more evenly
- Cleaning changes over times
- Sustainability between relevance and implementation
- Digital aids for housework only relevant in certain areas
- Digitalisation makes its way to housework - through the back door
- Mopping and vacuuming robots - what is used for cleaning ?
- Fig. 1 : shows the methodology and the most important data of the study "So putzt Deutschland" ("How Germany cleans"), which was conducted by INNOFACT AG on behalf of IKW
- Fig. 2 : Relevance of order and cleanliness in the parental home compared to one’s own household are almost identical
- Fig. 3 : Slightly more than half (61%) of the respondents say that their motivation to clean is largely self-driven, while 51 per cent need external factors as motivation for housework
- Fig. 4 : The social norms : It was deeply anchored in the parent's generation that the mother looked after the house. 98 per cent of the respondents stated that it was predominantly the mother who took care of the housework
- Fig. 5 : In the new federal states, 68 per cent of the housework in the parental home was done by both parents, in 28 per cent of the cases equally. In the old federal states, 45 per cent did the housework together and 15 per cent equally
- Fig. 6 : Only 20 per cent of the respondents in the study “So putzt Deutschland” ("How Germany cleans") use a cleaning schedule, which is either strictly or rather loosely adhered to. Of this group, 89 per cent create it in paper form, 11 per cent use an appEn ligne : https://drive.google.com/file/d/1xTSks24D6rsRNywYWPEMcuoaeULc_L1T/view?usp=drive [...] Format de la ressource électronique : Permalink : https://e-campus.itech.fr/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=39589
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