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Eggebeen, David J.; Hawkins, Alan J. – Journal of Family Issues, 1990
Argues that meaning of economic motive for White married mothers' labor force participation has changed over past 30 years. Asserts that, for most White married mothers, decision to work is characterized as personal choice to seek ideal lifestyle combining family and employment rather than economic necessity. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Change, Economic Factors, Employed Parents, Family Income
Shapiro, Isaac; Greenstein, Robert – 1990
Poverty is an important antecedent factor affecting education. One of the most striking characteristics of rural poverty is the extent to which the rural poor work. About 65% of poor nonmetro families have at least one worker, compared to 54% of poor metro families. This report focuses on federal and state policy reforms that would assure poor…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Family Income, Minimum Wage, Poverty
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Lindjord, Denise – Journal of Early Education and Family Review, 2000
Examines impact of presidential candidate George W. Bush's proposed tax cuts on families of various income levels. Discusses how replacing current five-rates with four lower rates would reduce high marginal tax rates for moderate-income working families, focusing on effects of reporting tax breaks in terms of actual dollars rather than…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employed Parents, Family (Sociological Unit), Family Financial Resources
Glossop, Robert – 1987
When looking at current data on families, it is important to examine many of the assumptions held concerning families. While families do share common needs and aspirations, it is unwise to invoke an image of the family which assumes that all families fulfill tasks in the same way. Practitioners in the fields of education and the social services…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Family Characteristics, Family Income, Family Life
Roosevelt Center for American Policy Studies, Washington, DC. – 1989
The 813 participants in the Roosevelt Center's May, 1989, regional citizen assemblies discussed trends affecting workers, employers, and families and laid the groundwork for a recommended national work and family policy. Part 1 of this report analyzes the results of a series of introductory exercises in which citizens were asked to register their…
Descriptors: Citizen Role, Day Care, Early Childhood Education, Employed Parents
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Greater Minneapolis Day Care Association – Young Children, 1995
Presents the results of a survey of Minnesota families on the waiting list for child care assistance--families eligible for assistance for whom no funds are available. Suggests that this waiting has a devastating economic and emotional impact on those families. Proposes the child care sliding fee program as a possible solution to these problems.…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Employed Parents, Family Income, Family Problems
General Accounting Office, Washington, DC. Div. of Human Resources. – 1991
In 1991, the Government Accounting Office (GAO) developed an empirical estimate of the magnitude of the problems mother-only families face in escaping poverty. The GAO also tried to identify federal policies that could help such families. Data from the National Longitudinal Survey of the Labor Market Experience of Youth were used to assess the…
Descriptors: Day Care, Employed Parents, Employment Potential, Family Income
Zill, Nicholas; And Others – 1984
The Interagency Conference on Child and Family Statistics was organized around seven groups that were asked to develop specific recommendations for improving the federal statistical database on children and families. This booklet is a report on the recommendations made at the conference. The first part of the report distills and synthesizes the…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Agency Cooperation, Children, Coordination