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Mann, Judy – Young Children, 1985
Describes the current post-Superwoman era in which women are more free to make choices about homemaking and employment. Women are now secure enough in the workforce that they can quit or work part-time without feeling they have let the sisterhood down. (CB)
Descriptors: Adults, Career Choice, Career Planning, Employed Women

Garabaghi, Ninou K. – International Social Science Journal, 1983
Official statistics on women's participation in the economy are used to conceal the real economic contributions of women. Several ways of tabulating a national economic activity, all of which ignore the contribution of domestic economies to national economies, are analyzed, and the implications of the invisibility of women's work are discussed.…
Descriptors: Economic Research, Economics, Employed Women, Females

Metraux, Daniel A. – Journal of the National Association of Women Deans, Administrators, and Counselors, 1987
Discusses the status of women in contemporary Japan. Describes their role as mothers and homemakers, the obstacles they face in maintaining developing careers, and the discrimination they face in a patriarchal society. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Career Development, Cultural Influences, Employed Women, Females
Weis, Susan F.; Carlos, Ellen A. – Illinois Teacher of Home Economics, 1983
Occupational home economics has been affected by several critical problems which hamper its integration with home economics education, including sex discrimination, devaluation of homemaking and "women's jobs," and marital parity. Educators should find new ways to encourage and nurture occupational home economics. (SK)
Descriptors: Career Exploration, Employed Women, Employment, Homemakers

Ferber, Marianne A. – Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 1982
Reviews research published since 1976 that deals with the economics of women and work in the United States. Indicates that female labor force participation is related to women's household activity and vice versa. Focuses on problems of sex discrimination in the labor force. (Author/MJL)
Descriptors: Economic Research, Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Family Structure
Schroeder, Patricia – USA Today, 1983
Faulty laws, unfair practices, and years of tradition in the workplace keep women from economic equality. The Economic Equity Act proposed by Congress will address inequalities in tax and retirement matters, the need for better dependent care, nondiscrimination in insurance, regulatory reform, and child support enforcement. (IS)
Descriptors: Day Care, Discriminatory Legislation, Displaced Homemakers, Divorce
Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. Senate Committee on Finance. – 1983
These Congressional hearings contain testimony pertaining to the passage of women's career choice equity legislation. The hearings were convened to determine whether federal law, either directly or indirectly, regulates economic opportunities for women in such a way as to alter their career choice between paid employment and homemaking. During the…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Demography, Economic Opportunities, Employed Women
Appelbaum, Eileen; Bailey, Thomas; Berg, Peter; Kalleberg, Arne L. – 2002
Until the 1970s, social norms dictated that women provided care for their families and men were employed for pay. The rapid increase in paid work for women has resulted in an untenable model of work and care in which all employees are assumed to be unencumbered with family responsibilities and women who care for their families are dismissed as…
Descriptors: Adult Day Care, Behavior Standards, Caregivers, Child Care