21.12137/TW2B48Butkevičienė, EglėEglėButkevičienė0000-0002-5631-360XInstitute of Policy and Public Administration, Faculty of Social Sciences, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania [Project Leader]Balžekienė, AistėAistėBalžekienė0000-0001-8557-0544Institute of Policy and Public Administration, Faculty of Social Sciences, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania [Project Member]Morkevičius, VaidasVaidasMorkevičius0000-0002-2174-0396Institute of Policy and Public Administration, Faculty of Social Sciences, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania [Project Member]Ražanauskaitė, JustinaJustinaRažanauskaitėInstitute of Policy and Public Administration, Faculty of Social Sciences, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania [Project Member]Šarkutė, LigitaLigitaŠarkutė0000-0002-1835-0186Institute of Policy and Public Administration, Faculty of Social Sciences, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania [Project Member]Telešienė, AudronėAudronėTelešienė0000-0003-0356-1631Institute of Policy and Public Administration, Faculty of Social Sciences, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania [Project Member]Žvaliauskas, GiedriusGiedriusŽvaliauskas0000-0001-8970-0756Institute of Policy and Public Administration, Faculty of Social Sciences, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania [Project Member; Data curation]ISSP 2012: Family and Changing Gender Roles IV, Lithuania, January - February 2013Lithuanian Data Archive for SSH (LiDA)2022Social Sciencesgender rolefamiliesfamily roleswomenmenwomen's rolefamily lifeFamily life and marriageGender and gender rolesŽvaliauskas, GiedriusGiedriusŽvaliauskasCenter for Data Analysis and Archiving (DAtA), Faculty of Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities, Kaunas University of Technology, LithuaniaVilčinskas, VidasVidasVilčinskasLithuanian Data Archive for Social Sciences and HumanitiesCenter for Data Analysis and Archiving (DAtA), Faculty of Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania2013-12-122013-02-052013-05-072023-12-022013-01-12/2013-02-05Survey dataLiDA_SurveyData_0297200478421873246810943466754756application/gziptext/tab-separated-valuesapplication/gzipapplication/pdfapplication/pdf2.2<b><i>The purpose of the study</i></b>: to analyse Lithuanian residents attitude towards family, coordination of men and women domestic and labour roles. <br> <b><i>Major investigated questions</i></b>: it was aimed to find out Lithuanian residents attitude towards marriage and children: if a working mother can establish just as warm and secure relationships with her children as a mother who does not work, if housewives are satisfied with their lives just as much as women who are working for pay. It was asked who should earn to household income - men or women. It was questioned how much women should work when there is a child under school age and after the youngest child starts school. Also, questions about marriage were asked. Further, respondents assessed if one father or mother can bring up a child as well as two parents together. Respondents indicated what the ideal number of children for a family to have should be. Respondents were asked about children: if watching children grow up is life's greatest joy, if raising children restricts the employment and career chances of one or both parents, etc. It as analysed who should take a paid parental leave - mother or father. Respondents indicated who should primarily provide childcare for under school age children and who should primarily cover the costs of childcare for children under school age. Also, questions about help for elderly people. Further, respondents were asked about distribution (real and imaginary right) of household work. It was analysed who has the final say when respondent and his/hers spouse/partner are deciding on weekend activities. Respondents were asked to evaluate total his/hers and spouse/partner income and indicate who has the higher income. A portion of questions was assigned to evaluate roles coordination in the family and home. At the end respondent were asked if they feel happy, are they satisfied with their work and family life. <br> <b><i>Socio-demographic characteristics</i></b>: gender, age, level of education, membership in organizations, religion, marital status, nationality, political views, political participation, size of household, respondent's average personal income, place of residence, working situation of the respondent and of his/her spouse or partner.SPSS, 25<p> Dataverse collection “International Social Survey Programme” contains surveys of the International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) conducted in Lithuania from 2010. </p> <p> The ISSP is a cross-national collaboration programme conducting annual surveys on diverse topics relevant to social sciences. Established in 1984 by its founding members Australia, Germany, Great Britain and the US, the ISSP has since included members covering various cultures around the globe. Its institutional members, each of them representing one nation, consist of academic organizations, universities, or survey agencies. </p><p> The main language of the study is Lithuanian (lit). </p> <p> Standardized questionnaire was provided for the respondents in Lithuanian (lit). </p> <p> Dataset (data and metadata) “ISSP 2012: Family and Changing Gender Roles IV, Lithuania, January - February 2013” from 2013-12-12 to 2021-10-01 was available in the portal of Lithuanian Data Archive for Humanities and Social Sciences (LiDA) www.lidata.eu; object PID: www.lidata.eu/data/quant/LiDA_ISSP_0262. The first data edition was produced by Žvaliauskas Giedrius 2013-12-12. </p>Vilnius, LithuaniaResearch Council of Lithuania (National Research Programme “Social Challenges to National Security”)SIN-07/12