BargadA.HydeJ. S. (1991). Women's studies: A study of feminist identity development in women. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 15, 181–201.
2.
BranscombeN. R.DeauxK. (1991). Feminist attitude accessibility and behavioral intentions. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 15, 411–418.
3.
DempewolffJ. A. (1974). Development and validation of a feminism scale. Psychological Reports, 34, 651–657.
4.
FriezeI. H.McHughM. C. (Eds.). (1997). Measuring beliefs about appropriate roles for women and men [Special issue]. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 21.
5.
GibbonsJ. L.HambyB. A.DennisW. D. (1997). Researching gender-role ideologies internationally and cross-culturally. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 21, 151–170.
6.
HenleyN. M.MengK.O'BrienD.McCarthyW. J.SockloskieR. J. (1998). Developing a scale to measure the diversity of feminist attitudes. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 22, 317–348.
7.
KimmelE. B. (1989). The experience of feminism. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 13, 133–146.
8.
KirkpatrickC. (1936). The construction of a belief pattern scale for measuring attitudes toward feminism. Journal of Social Psychology, 7, 421–437.
9.
McHughM. C.FriezeI. H. (1997). The measurement of gender-role attitudes: A review and commentary. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 21, 1–16.
10.
RenzettiC. M. (1987). New wave or second stage? Attitudes of college women toward feminism. Sex Roles, 16, 265–277.
11.
SpenceJ. T.HelmreichR. (1972). The Attitudes Toward Women Scale: An objective instrument to measure the attitudes toward the rights and roles of women in contemporary society. JSAS: Catalogue of Selected Documents in Psychology, 2, 66–67 (Ms. No. 153).
12.
SwimJ. K.CohenL. L. (1997). Overt, covert, and subtle sexism: A comparison between Attitudes Toward Women and Modern Sexism Scales. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 21, 103–118.