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Tuckman, Barbara H.; And Others – Thrust: The Journal for Employment and Training Professionals, 1981
Compares pre-CETA and post-CETA earnings and income for racial and sexual categories, controlling for age and education. It was found that White gains exceed those for Blacks but that the White income distribution appears to converge with that of Blacks after CETA. (CT)
Descriptors: Blacks, Females, Racial Differences, Salary Wage Differentials

Haberfeld, Yitchak; Shenhav, Yehouda – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1990
Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses of Census data found that salary discrimination against Black scientists and female scientists worsened between the 1970s and the 1980s. Female scientists earned about 12 percent less than males in 1972, but 14 percent less in 1982. Black scientists earned about the same as Whites in 1972, but 6 percent…
Descriptors: Blacks, Females, Longitudinal Studies, Racial Discrimination

Boston, Thomas D. – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1990
Analysis of data from the Current Population Survey identified primary and secondary labor market sectors, based on whether specific skills or prior training were conditions of employment. Results showed significant unexplained earnings differentials across sectors for four groups: Black men, White men, Black women, and White women. (Author/SK)
Descriptors: Blacks, Females, Job Skills, Labor Market

Kruse, Douglas L. – Monthly Labor Review, 1998
Due to lower rates of employment and other labor market difficulties, working-age persons with disabilities tend to have lower incomes and are more likely to live in poverty than persons without disabilities. Those with severe disabilities are more likely to be female, African American, older, and less educated than those without disabilities.…
Descriptors: Blacks, Disabilities, Economically Disadvantaged, Females
Bennefield, Robert L.; McNeil, John M. – Current Population Reports, 1989
This document examines 8-year trends in the labor force status and other characteristics (including age and years of school completed) of persons with a work force disability, using March supplements to the U.S. Census Bureau's Current Population Survey (CPS). (Disabled persons are considered to be individuals 16 to 64 years old with a disability…
Descriptors: Blacks, Disabilities, Employment Statistics, Females

Meisenheimer, Joseph R., II – Monthly Labor Review, 1990
Although college-educated Black women and White women have very similar earnings, substantial economic differences still exist between college-educated Black men and White men. (Author)
Descriptors: Blacks, College Graduates, Employment Level, Females

Colclough, Glenna; Tolbert, Charles M., II – Work and Occupations: An International Sociological Journal, 1990
Explores the relationship among high technology industrialization, skill levels, and economic inequality. Finds that minority labor force participants experience more earnings discrimination in high tech industries than in other industries. Attributes findings to variations in local labor market contexts and to differing stages of product cycles…
Descriptors: Blacks, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Females, Labor Force
Beresford, Jack; Ellis, Diane C. – 1978
In 1970 there were about 68,000 persons of minority, racial, and ethnic background who had occupations as actors, architects, authors, dancers, designers, musicians, composers, painters, scupltors, photographers, radio and television announcers, university teachers of art, music, or drama, and other types of artists and entertainers. In this…
Descriptors: American Indians, Art Activities, Artists, Asian Americans

Mellor, Earl F.; Stamas, George D. – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
Recent years of inflation and recession held real earnings of wage and salary workers below 1973 levels; the pay gap between Black and White full-time employees narrowed after 1967, but the wide earnings disparity by sex remains. (Author)
Descriptors: Blacks, Economic Factors, Educational Attainment, Females
National Center for Education Statistics (ED), Washington, DC. – 1994
Wages and salaries are influenced by many factors, including the employer's perception of the productivity and availability of workers with different levels of education. They are also affected by economic conditions in the industries that typically employ workers with different levels of education. Annual earnings are influenced by the number of…
Descriptors: Blacks, College Graduates, Comparative Analysis, Dropouts
Briley, Kyle D. – 1983
According to this report by the Kentucky Commission on Human Rights, women in the Kentucky State government continued to suffer from serious inequities as of November 1982. The salary gap between men and women widened to an annual difference of $4,114, the largest gap of an eight-year trend. The salary gap between black women and white women grew…
Descriptors: Blacks, Employment Level, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Females
Hairston, Creasie Finney, Ed. – 1980
Findings are reported of a survey of the University of Tennessee School of Social Work (UTSSW) alumni conducted during 1978, which sought to identify ways to improve the school's graduate program, to strengthen its ability to serve its graduates, and to develop further knowledge in the area of social work manpower. The first paper, "A…
Descriptors: Blacks, College Graduates, Education Work Relationship, Employment Patterns
Sorensen, Elaine – 1991
Two contrasting trends concerning gender and racial wage levels for U.S. workers emerged in the 1980s. The first trend, which is gender-related, is that women made tremendous gains in their wages relative to those of men: in 1978 women earned 61 percent as much as men, while by 1990 that figure rose to 72 percent. Furthermore, these gains extended…
Descriptors: Blacks, Economic Research, Employment Practices, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)

Pinzler, Isabelle Katz; Ellis, Deborah – Journal of Social Issues, 1989
Discusses ways to close the gap between the courts' approach to applying Federal law to sex-based and race-based wage discrimination and the law's potential to change wage inequities. Discusses the Equal Pay Act and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Explores ways the court applies these laws. (JS)
Descriptors: Blacks, Civil Rights Legislation, Comparable Worth, Court Litigation

Tomaskovic-Devey, Donald – Social Forces, 1993
Analysis of North Carolina survey data indicates that females' average hourly wages were 71% of males', and blacks' wages were 78% of whites'. Human capital factors (educational attainment and occupational experience) explained 31% and 3% of the racial and gender gaps, respectively. Job gender composition explained 56% of the gender gap; job…
Descriptors: Blacks, Education Work Relationship, Educational Attainment, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)