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Elder, Sara; Johnson, Lawrence Jeffrey – International Labour Review, 1999
Data indicate that women's experience in the labor market is substantially different from men's. Women work in different sectors for fewer hours; women have lower rates of education and literacy; and women are more likely to be unemployed, underemployed, or outside the labor force. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Labor Market

Shank, Susan E. – Monthly Labor Review, 1988
The author discusses women's labor market participation during this century, focusing on the current figure with 70 percent of women age 25 to 54 as labor force participants. She projects that increases will continue, although at a slower pace, between 1986 and 2000. (CH)
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Futures (of Society)

Smits, Jeroen; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1996
Studied effects of occupational status differences between spouses on the wife's employment and on her occupational achievement in European countries. Results show a tendency toward similarity in occupational status within marriages. Labor force participation of a wife is highest when her potential occupational status equals her husband's…
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employment, Employment Patterns

Fullerton, Howard N., Jr. – Monthly Labor Review, 1999
Women's labor force participation rates have increased significantly over the past 50 years, narrowing the gap been rates for women and men. However, aging will play a dominant role in the rates for 2015-2025. (Author)
Descriptors: Adults, Aging (Individuals), Employed Women, Employment Patterns
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1997
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there were approximately 1.2 million women veterans (5 percent of all veterans) in the United States in 1996. Female veterans were 84 percent white, 12 percent black, and 4 percent Hispanic. Between 1987 and 1991, women accounted for 11 percent of persons separating from the military, a number that is…
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Employment Qualifications
Hartmann, Heidi; Whittaker, Julie – 1998
Currently, the median full-time woman worker earns 74.4 percent of the annual earnings of the median man. Over their lifetime, young women stand to lose a great deal of money due to differences in the wages for women and men. Estimates are that the average 25-year-old woman who works full time year round for 40 years will earn $523,000 less than…
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Employment Projections
McNeil, John M.; Lamas, Enrique J. – Current Population Reports, 1987
This report contains 23 tables reporting the differences between men and women in lifetime labor force attachment, occupation, and earnings. The information was collected from a sample of approximately 20,000 households in May, June, July, and August 1984, as part of the Survey of Income Program Participation. The first part of this report…
Descriptors: Adults, Career Choice, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
Bureau of Labor Statistics, Washington, DC. – 1994
In 1993, about 21 million persons in the United States (about one-fifth of the total in nonagricultural industries) worked part time (fewer than 35 hours a week). Although the majority of persons working part time do so voluntarily, over the past 2 decades the number of involuntary part-time workers, those who want full-time jobs but who settle…
Descriptors: Adults, Business Cycles, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
Jones, Ethel B. – 1983
A study focused on the extent to which women undergo a spell of unemployment upon reentering the labor force and the factors that determine whether they undergo this spell of unemployment. Data were from two samples of female reentrants constructed from the National Longitudinal Survey for 1972. The sample of young women included those 20-28 years…
Descriptors: Adults, Career Education, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1997
Between 1986 and 1996, the number of black women aged 16 and over in the United States increased from 11 million to 13 million. Labor force participation for black women rose during that time from 56.9 percent to 60.4 percent. In 1996 the total labor force population of black women was 7.9 million. Of these, 80 percent worked full time. Black…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Employed Women, Employment Level
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1989
Data on women in labor unions in 1988 reveal the following facts: (1) women are becoming an increasingly important part of membership in organized labor, as the total number of workers in unions declines; (2) in 1988, nearly 6 million of the 47.5 million employed women in the United States, or about 13 percent, were members of unions; (3) since…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
Hartmann, Heidi; Whittaker, Julie – 1998
Since 1979, the wage gap between women and men has narrowed significantly, falling by more than 10 percent overall. The closing of the wage gap has slowed considerably in the 1990's, however, with women's real wages (adjusted for inflation) stagnating in recent year and men's wages continuing to decline. The lack of growth in both women's and…
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Smith, Shirley J. – 1986
A study presented a new set of official worklife estimates based on patterns observed during the period 1979-80. Two new dimensions were added to the discussion: the effects of race and of educational background on lifetime labor force behavior. The new figures were calculated from information collected in the Current Population Survey. The…
Descriptors: Adults, Career Education, Educational Attainment, Educational Background
Sekscenski, Edward S. – Monthly Labor Review, 1981
Findings are presented from a May 1969 survey on the growing number of "moonlighters" in the work force: (1) one in twenty workers held more than one job during the survey week; (2) three of every ten multiple jobholders were women, nearly double the proportion of 1969; (3) the number of men with multiple jobs remained about the same; (4) the…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Career Education, Employed Women
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 2000
This paper from the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides information on current status and historical trends in the employment of Hispanic women. Some of the findings include the following: (1) the Hispanic women's population increased by 52 percent from 1990-1999, compared with 17 percent for black women and 7 percent for white women; (2) 9…
Descriptors: Adults, Educational Attainment, Employed Women, Employment Level