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Mooi-Reci, Irma; Mills, Melinda – Social Forces, 2012
This study examines whether a series of unemployment insurance benefit reforms that took place over a 20-year period in the Netherlands had a gendered effect on the duration of unemployment and labor market outcomes. Using longitudinal data from the Dutch Labor Supply Panel (OSA) over the period 1980-2000, and adopting a quasi-experimental design,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Unemployment, Insurance, Gender Differences
Treas, Judith; van der Lippe, Tanja; Tai, Tsui-o Chloe – Social Forces, 2011
A long-standing debate questions whether homemakers or working wives are happier. Drawing on cross-national data for 28 countries, this research uses multi-level models to provide fresh evidence on this controversy. All things considered, homemakers are slightly happier than wives who work fulltime, but they have no advantage over part-time…
Descriptors: Labor Force Nonparticipants, Spouses, Marital Status, Homemakers
Clark, Shelley; Kenney, Catherine – Social Forces, 2010
Furstenberg et al. (1995) suggested that one unanticipated consequence of current high levels of divorce might be a "matrilineal tilt" in intergenerational wealth flows. This research uses six waves of the Health and Retirement Survey (1992 to 2002) to investigate this possibility with respect to financial transfers from parents to their…
Descriptors: Demography, Family Financial Resources, Financial Support, Divorce
Maume, David J. – Social Forces, 2008
It may be premature to think that contemporary families are egalitarian because wives are working more and fathers are more involved with children. This research contends that egalitarianism is reflected in gender similarity in missing work to attend to children's needs. Drawing from two national surveys of dual-earner parents, familial factors…
Descriptors: National Surveys, Gender Differences, Mothers, Child Caregivers
Gee, Gilbert C.; Pavalko, Eliza K.; Long, J. Scott – Social Forces, 2007
Self-reported discrimination is linked to diminished well-being, but the processes generating these reports remain poorly understood. Employing the life course perspective, this paper examines the correspondence between expected age preferences for workers and perceived age discrimination among a nationally representative sample of 7,225 working…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Age Discrimination, Employee Attitudes, Employer Attitudes
Bolzendahl, Catherine; Brooks, Clem – Social Forces, 2007
One of the sharpest criticisms of welfare state research is insufficient attention to factors relating to gender relations and inequalities. Recent scholarship has begun to address welfare state effects on gender-related outcomes, but the evaluation of theories of welfare development with respect to gender factors is somewhat less developed,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Political Power, Labor Force

Stevens, Gillian; Boyd, Monica – Social Forces, 1980
Unlike previous research on women's occupational mobility, considers (1) housework to be a possible occupational outcome, and (2) the occupations of both parents as influences on daughters' occupations. Finds that women whose mothers worked are more likely to join the labor force and that their occupations are likely to resemble their mothers'.…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Employed Women, Labor Force, Mothers

Maume, David J., Jr. – Social Forces, 1991
Among 1,814 employed women, weekly child care expenditures predicted employment turnover; the effect was stronger for mothers of preschoolers and did not vary by income. Educational attainment was unrelated to use of paid child care, or to quitting among mothers using such services. Contains 29 references. (Author/SV)
Descriptors: Day Care, Employed Parents, Employed Women, Employment Problems
Gorman, Elizabeth H. – Social Forces, 2006
Work uncertainty may affect gender disparities in professionals' upward mobility in organizational hierarchies. Professional work involves three forms of uncertainty--problem variability, strategic indeterminacy and dependence on autonomous actors--that weaken the association between performance and ability, leading organizational decision-makers…
Descriptors: Females, Law Schools, Promotion (Occupational), Professional Personnel
Read, Jen'nan Ghazal; Cohen, Philip N. – Social Forces, 2007
Leading explanations for ethnic disparities in U.S. women's employment derive largely from research on men. Although recent case studies of newer immigrant groups suggest that these explanations may be less applicable than previously believed, no study to date has assessed this question systematically. Using 2000 Census data, this study tests the…
Descriptors: Females, Employment Patterns, Ethnic Groups, Whites

Martin, Walter L.; Poston, Dudley L., Jr. – Social Forces, 1972
Descriptors: Career Choice, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Females
Pettit, Becky; Hook, Jennifer Lynn – Social Forces, 2005
In this paper we analyze social survey data from 19 countries using multi-level modeling methods in an effort to synthesize structural and institutional accounts for variation in women's employment. Observed demographic characteristics show much consistency in their relationship to women's employment across countries, yet there is significant…
Descriptors: Surveys, Employment, Models, Employed Women

Haug, Mario R. – Social Forces, 1973
Evaluates empirically the probable effect on family social class measurement of considering women's work roles and education, using data collected in several studies to estimate the extent to which families' class positions would be changed if the wife's job and schooling were taken into account. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Family Status, Females, Measurement

Hull, Kathleen E.; Nelson, Robert L. – Social Forces, 2000
Gender is strongly related to career outcomes among Chicago lawyers. Men and women begin their careers in difference practice contexts, and the differences grow over time. Individual preferences do not fully account for the gender gap. Law school prestige and class rank influence career paths but do not explain the gender gap. (Contains 85…
Descriptors: Careers, Educational Status Comparison, Employed Women, Employment Level
Del Campo, Esther – Social Forces, 2005
This article attempts to offer a general panorama of some issues related to political representation of women in Latin America. Specifically, it analyzes the advances made in the representation of women in politics during the 1990s. It offers a descriptive analysis of national cases in Latin America from an institutional focus. In spite of the…
Descriptors: Gender Bias, Foreign Countries, Politics, Females
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