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Employment Standards Administration (DOL), Washington, DC. Women's Bureau. – 1976
Women are reported to work for the same reasons men do--to provide for the welfare of themselves, their families, or others. Statistics from the Bureau of the Census and the Bureau of Labor Statistics, quoted for white and minority women workers, show that despite unfavorable economic conditions in the first quarter of 1975, an average of nearly…
Descriptors: Census Figures, Employed Women, Employment, Employment Statistics

Klein, Deborah Pisetzner – Monthly Labor Review, 1975
Over the past quarter of a century, the labor force participation rate of women 25 to 54 climbed from 37 percent to 54 percent. (Author)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment, Employment Statistics, Growth Patterns
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1977
The status of minority women workers in 1976 is examined, particularly in relationship to their white counterparts, under the following topic headings: (1) labor force participation; (2) unemployment status; (3) reasons for unemployment; (4) unemployment during the recession; (5) occupations; (6) marital status; (7) women heads of families; (8)…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment, Employment Level, Employment Statistics
Bureau of Labor Statistics (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1973
This brief report presents and discusses statistics on the marital and family characteristics of workers in 1973 [e.g., nearly 40 million married men and 20 million married women were among the 88 million person labor force, and of the 1.7 million increase in the labor force, three-quarters consisted of married women (34 percent), single men (24…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment, Employment Statistics, Females
Bureau of Labor Statistics (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1975
The jobless rate among all household heads reached 6 percent in April 1975, double the average rate over the 1963-74 period (2.8 percent), and half again as high as the previous peak (4 percent) recorded during the first half of 1963. The number of unemployed household heads increased from 1.4 to 3.2 million from October 1973 to April 1975, from…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Employed Women, Employment, Employment Level

Johnson, Beverly L. – 1978
This pamphlet summarizes the statistics on women which are available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and indicates where the data may be found. The sources indicated in this document represent a wide variety of publications, including press releases, periodicals, bulletins, and reports. The information is divided into the following four areas:…
Descriptors: Educational Background, Employed Women, Employment, Employment Statistics
Congress of the U. S., Washington, DC. House Committee on Government Operations. – 1986
At this hearing questions of unemployment compensation, job training, minimum wage, and statistics gathering of the Bureau of Labor Statistics were considered. Points made included the following: while minorities are overrepresented among the poor, most poor people are white; most poor people are also women, possibly because they have less access…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment, Employment Statistics, Federal Aid
Shaeffer, Ruth Gilbert; Axel, Helen – 1978
This chartbook documents with extensive charts what happened between 1970-75 in improving job opportunities for women, with special emphasis on the progress made in business. Employment data come from census, payroll, report, and survey information. Section 1 considers male-female employment profiles (1970, 1975) for the whole economy. Section 2…
Descriptors: Adults, Business, Career Education, Careers
Thaxton, Louis C.; Tuthill, Dean F. – 1979
This is an illustrated report on some findings of the Citizens Education Project (CEP), a 1979 survey of the employment situation of communities in five Maryland counties. The study was conducted by the Maryland Cooperative Extension Service, University of Maryland, College Park and Eastern Shore, with funding from Extension Program 1890. The…
Descriptors: Blacks, Career Development, Community Involvement, Community Programs
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1994
This handbook offers a comprehensive view of the labor force activity of women in the United States and describes a range of legal and socioeconomic developments that have had an effect upon women's participation and progress in the work force. Through numerous statistical charts and tables, the book depicts change and reactions to change in the…
Descriptors: Demand Occupations, Employed Parents, Employed Women, Employment
Cogan, John F.; Berger, Franklin – 1978
The impact of the timing, spacing, and number of children on a married woman's wage growth over her life cycle was examined. The data used for the analysis were information pertaining to the labor market experience of women and the birth dates of their children, taken from the 1976 survey of the Michigan Panel Study of Income Dynamics (IDP). There…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Child Rearing, Cross Sectional Studies, Employed Women

Heylin, Michael – Chemical and Engineering News, 1989
Notes that women have earned 20 percent of chemistry Ph.D. degrees in recent years but hold only 4.9 percent of tenure track faculty positions in graduate chemistry departments. Lists faculties with three or more women and with none. Reviews a survey by the American Chemical Society's Women Chemists Committee. (MVL)
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Science, Employed Women, Employment
Vatter, Ethel L. – 1974
The study examines the increasing levels of female labor in the economy over the period between 1940 and 1970. Married women with husbands present show the most pronounced increase in participation rates with increases in every age group. Chart 1 and Table 1 present data on the percentage of women in the U. S. labor force over this period by both…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Data Analysis, Data Collection, Employed Women
Bureau of Labor Statistics (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1975
The document reports findings from the latest survey of multiple jobholders 16 years old and over. About 3.9 million workers held two or more jobs in May 1975. This accounted for 4.7 percent of all employed persons. The multiple jobholding rate for men was 5.8 percent and 2.9 percent for women. The rate was also higher for whites than blacks. The…
Descriptors: Agricultural Laborers, Census Figures, Employed Women, Employment
McEaddy, Beverly Johnson – Monthly Labor Review, 1976
This report describes the socioeconomic conditions of women who are heads of families noting that the accelerated growth of families headed by women in recent years, especially since 1970, has been of concern in part because one out of every three, as compared to one of every eighteen of the families headed by men, is living at or below what is…
Descriptors: Age, Economic Research, Employed Women, Employment
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