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Occupational Outlook Quarterly, 2010
The labor force is the number of people aged 16 or older who are either working or looking for work. It does not include active-duty military personnel or institutionalized people, such as prison inmates. Quantifying this total supply of labor is a way of determining how big the economy can get. Labor force participation rates vary significantly…
Descriptors: Labor Force Nonparticipants, Race, Females, Population Growth
Saenz, Victor B.; Ponjuan, Luis – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2009
Latino male students are "vanishing" from the American education pipeline, a trend that is especially evident at the secondary and postsecondary levels. The question of why Latino males are vanishing from America's colleges is complex, and this scholarly article explores some of the socio-cultural factors, peer dynamics, and labor force demands…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Labor Force, Males, Hispanic Americans
Berlin, Gordon L. – Future of Children, 2007
Gordon Berlin discusses the nation's long struggle to reduce poverty in families with children, and proposes a counterintuitive solution--rewarding the work of individuals. He notes that policymakers' difficulty in reducing family poverty since 1973 is attributable to two intertwined problems--falling wages among low-skilled workers and the…
Descriptors: Wages, Poverty, Taxes, Tax Credits
Venkatesh, Sudhir Alladi – 2001
This study examined links between early adolescent exposure to entrepreneurial gang activity and later criminal justice, economic, and social outcomes, comparing the social and behavioral outcomes of young people with active gang involvement and their non-gang affiliated counterparts. Participants came from a concentrated poor, predominantly…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Crime, Economic Factors
Sum, Andrew; Trubs'kyy, Mykhaylo; Fogg, Neeta P. – Connection: The Journal of the New England Board of Higher Education, 2003
The impacts of foreign immigration on population and labor force growth during the 1990s varied widely across U.S. geographic regions, divisions and states. New England was far more dependent than nearly all other regions on the new wave of foreign immigrants to achieve its population growth and labor force growth during the past decade. In fact,…
Descriptors: Population Growth, Employment Patterns, Labor Market, Labor
Lyson, Thomas A. – 1987
The most recent census data from the United States and New Zealand show a dramatic increase in the number of female farmers and farm managers and support two explanations for this increase. First, the 1970s saw large numbers of women enter traditionally male occupations as many of the formal and informal barriers were removed. One consequence of…
Descriptors: Agricultural Trends, Census Figures, Cohort Analysis, Employment Patterns
National Council of La Raza, Washington, DC. – 1998
This document consists of four separately-published fact sheets providing information, derived from U.S. government sources, about the condition of Hispanics in the United States. The first, "Hispanic Children, Poverty, and Federal Assistance Programs," describes the status of Hispanic American children and the federal programs designed…
Descriptors: Census Figures, Children, Educational Attainment, Employment Patterns
Bureau of Labor Statistics (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1992
The employment histories of young persons were examined using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, which provides a nearly complete work history on all jobs held and weeks worked over a 12-year period, 1978-1990. The data provided information on a sample of young men and women aged 14-22 in 1979 who have been interviewed yearly…
Descriptors: Blacks, Demography, Employed Women, Employment Level
Haveman, Robert H.; Wolfe, Barbara L. – 1981
This paper presents a decision-process model for explaining the growth in transfer recipiency (the receipt by working age people of disability income), the choice of work status, and the reduction in labor force participation of older workers. It is hypothesized that the attractiveness of disability income transfer options has led older male…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Eligibility, Employment Level, Employment Patterns
Kristy, Karen K. – 1983
Based on information found in statistical compilations and other publications, the status of women in librarianship was examined in three groups of countries: western-style democracies including the United States, Canada, France, and New Zealand; Soviet bloc countries including Bulgaria, Cuba, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR),…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Career Choice, Career Ladders, Developed Nations
Kanter, Rosabeth Moss; Goodman, Ellen – 1978
Two essays are presented, "The Changing Shape of Work: Psychosocial Trends in America," by Rosabeth Moss Kanter, and "Lives in Transition," by Ellen Goodman. In the first, several trends outlined include increasing participation of women and youths in the labor force, an increase in non-nuclear families, better jobs available to blacks combined…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, College Role, Educational Change, Employment Patterns
Jones, Jennifer M.; Castle, Josie – Vestes, 1983
Changes in women's participation in university education in Australia, as students, graduates, and faculty, are outlined with statistical data and analyzed in the context of Australia's economic history. Despite increased female participation at all levels, heavy imbalances are found to continue, particularly at the upper levels. (MSE)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Degrees (Academic), Educational Change, Educational History
Ben-Ami, Ilan – Migration World Magazine, 1992
Examines characteristics and immigration experiences of young male Israeli immigrants to New York City who find work in car washes and furniture moving, jobs requiring neither special skills nor work papers. Differences in background and long-range immigration plans between the groups are discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adults, Blue Collar Occupations, Cultural Background
Clark, W.; Zsigmond, Z. – 1981
Based on the 1978 survey of the labor market experiences of 1976 university and college graduates in Canada in the two years after graduation, this report examines the relations and implications of the education-employment nexus for both male and female graduates. Following a review of the background, scope, objectives, audience, methodology…
Descriptors: Classification, College Graduates, Comparative Analysis, Education Work Relationship
Medley, Carol – 1979
National Longitudinal Surveys of Labor Force Experience (NLS) data were used to describe those people who work outside the traditional 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. work day. Depending on the approximate time of day they worked, respondents were classified into four categories of workers: day, evening, night, and split shift (working hours interrupted by…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Demography, Employees
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