Time Budgets and Consumer Leisure-Time Behavior: an Eleven-Year-Later Replication and Extension (Part Ii - Males)

ABSTRACT - In a continuation of a paper presented at the 1986 ACR Conference, the author discusses the results of an analysis of the male data, comparing 1973 and 1984 study results. It is found that males significantly increased the amount of time spent, on-the-average, per week in seven leisure-time activities in contrast to females (Hawes 1987) who spent essentially an identical number of hours in these activities in both years.



Citation:

Doualass K. Hawes (1988) ,"Time Budgets and Consumer Leisure-Time Behavior: an Eleven-Year-Later Replication and Extension (Part Ii - Males)", in NA - Advances in Consumer Research Volume 15, eds. Micheal J. Houston, Provo, UT : Association for Consumer Research, Pages: 418-425.

Authors

Doualass K. Hawes, The University of Wyoming



Volume

NA - Advances in Consumer Research Volume 15 | 1988



Share Proceeding

Featured papers

See More

Featured

M12. From the Occult to Mainstream – Tracing Commodification of the Spiritual in the Context of Alternative Spiritualities

Richard Kedzior, Bucknell University

Read More

Featured

Competition and Trust in Economic Exchange: Biology, the Environment, and Self-Consciousness Matter

Richard P. Bagozzi, University of Michigan, USA
Jason Stornelli, Oregon State University, USA
Willem Verbeke, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Benjamin E. Bagozzi, University of Delaware, USA
Avik Chakrabarti, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA
Tiffany Vu, University of Michigan, USA

Read More

Featured

“Slim-As-Luxury” Effect: Product Shape as Input to Luxury Perceptions

Ji Jill Xiong, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Yu Ding, Columbia University, USA
Gita Venkataramani Johar, Columbia University, USA

Read More

Engage with Us

Becoming an Association for Consumer Research member is simple. Membership in ACR is relatively inexpensive, but brings significant benefits to its members.