Citations:gender-free


 * 2006, Roberta Berns, Child, family, school, community: socialization and support, page 551:
 * Are occupational roles gender-free (“mail carrier,” “salesperson”)? If the community has stereotypical attitudes—that women are nurturant and men are problem solvers, for example—the assignment of occupations to one or the other gender will be affected.

of objects

 * 1994 November, SPIN, volume 10, number 8, page 118:
 * GENDERFREE clothing & accessories fit beautifully regardless of sex/size.
 * 2002, World textile abstracts, published by the Shirley Institute, volume 34:
 * Also we found that gender-schematic tendency facilitated orientation for gender-free clothing behavior.

of time

 * During which people are not divided or restricted based on gender or the absence of gender.
 * 2003, Carol R. Ember, Melvin Ember, Encyclopedia of sex and gender: men and women in the world's cultures, volume 1, page 402:
 * At first glance, childhood seems to be a more or less “gender-free” phase, but nevertheless behavior judged as “natural” for boys or girls is either enhanced or discouraged. [...] Interestingly, some apparent “ natural” sex differences disappeared over time in the German Democratic Republic.