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Selmer, Jan; Leung, Alicia S. M. – Career Development International, 2002
Responses to a career management survey from 309 male and 79 female business expatriates revealed that, controlling for demographic differences, females could less often meet their career goals with the corporation. They were less likely to regard expatriation as a useful career move. Explanations were derived from relevant research literature.…
Descriptors: Career Development, Corporations, Employed Women, Foreign Countries
Engel, John W. – 1988
Traditional Japanese values discourage women from working outside the home. This research describes and compares Japanese men's and women's beliefs regarding employment of women. Questionnaires were distributed to approximately 900 Japanese men and women, and t-tests were used to test for differences between the men's and women's groups. Results…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cultural Influences, Employed Parents, Employed Women

Trovato, Frank – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1987
Conducted a longitudinal analysis of the relationship of divorce to the national suicide rate in Canada. Found the suicide rate varied directly with the rate of family dissolution, even after taking into account the effects of unemployment and females' participation in the labor force. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Divorce, Employed Women, Family Problems, Foreign Countries
National Committee on Pay Equity, Washington, DC. – 1988
This document comprises a report on international progress to close the "wage gap", the differential between the earnings of women and men. Information was gathered on pay equity activities from a survey of government agencies, trade unions, women's organizations, and international bodies. Almost all of the jurisdictions surveyed have…
Descriptors: Comparable Worth, Employed Women, Foreign Countries, International Studies

Isvan, Nilufer A. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1991
Used national household survey from Turkey to examine relationship between employment and fertility. Hypothesized that women's relative power within domestic decision process and/or autonomy are additional factors in determining responsiveness of fertility to female employment. Found that in Turkey, where gender relations are generally…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Decision Making, Employed Women, Foreign Countries

Gasson, Ruth; Winter, Michael – Journal of Rural Studies, 1992
Analyzed information on the activities of 272 principal male farmers and 245 wives from a random sample of 300 households in the Devon area of England. Found women were generally less involved than their husbands in farm tasks, farm management, and daily management. When both spouses had work other than farming, however, women were consulted much…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Employed Women, Farm Labor, Farm Management
Michel, Jean – 1988
Engineering in higher education has the lowest proportion of women students when compared with other fields of study. This book discusses the issues and problems that face the training and promotion of women at the university level. Part one discusses the background and trends of female participation in different regions and disciplines of higher…
Descriptors: College Science, Employed Women, Engineering Education, Engineers
Brown, Daniel J. – Interchange on Educational Policy, 1981
The problem of the representation of women in positions of educational leadership in Canada is discussed. Research shows that women are found to occupy only 17 percent of leadership positions when in fact they make up 54 percent of the profession as a whole. The issue of the relative abilities of women versus men in administrative performance is…
Descriptors: Administrator Qualifications, Administrator Role, Employed Women, Foreign Countries
Castleman, Tanya; Allen, Margaret – Australian Universities' Review, 1995
Data from 10 Australian universities' payrolls indicate that while women constitute a majority of general staff, they are concentrated in lower-level positions. While general staff are more likely than faculty to hold permanent positions, women disproportionately hold nonpermanent jobs, even when age and length of service are controlled.…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Females, Foreign Countries
Engel, John W. – 1987
Traditional ideals discourage Japanese women from working outside the home. This study was conducted to explore generational differences in Japanese attitudes toward women's employment and to interpret those differences in terms of social change. Questionnaires were distributed to approximately 900 Japanese men and women. Subjects were classified…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attitude Change, Cultural Influences, Employed Women
Gattiker, Urs E.; And Others – 1987
A major concern for researchers and managers alike is the inequality in the workforce based on gender and position. Researchers have found that women tend to hold disproportionately lower positions than men and receive remuneration of about 60 cents to the dollar compared to their male peers. This study assessed inequality in wage and position…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employer Employee Relationship, Employment Level, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)

Trimberger, Rosemary; MacLean, Michael J. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1982
Elementary school children (N=50) completed a questionnaire related to their perception of having working mothers. Using path analysis, found older children, girls, and children who stay alone after school feel more negatively affected by their mothers' employment than younger children, boys, and children who are supervised after school. (Author)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Child Rearing, Childhood Attitudes, Children

Harris, Roma M. – Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science, 1994
Describes the impact of Ontario's Pay Equity Act of 1987 on public libraries. Problems with the original legislation and its 1993 amendments are discussed. A survey of public libraries highlighting growing uneasiness between public library administrators and their municipal colleagues is described, and tables showing male comparators and salary…
Descriptors: City Government, Comparable Worth, Employed Women, Foreign Countries

Bryant, Heather E.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1991
Among 745 physicians graduated from the University of Calgary (Canada) women were more likely to take parental leave, but gender differences in breaks taken for other reasons were less. Women worked fewer hours in direct patient care. Female parents under 35 spent fewer hours on patient care than all male parents. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Careers, Clinical Experience, Employed Parents, Employed Women

Hughes, Rees; Mwiria, Kilemi – Comparative Education, 1989
Analyzes the experiences of Kenya's female university graduates in the labor market. Examines sex differences in university participation rates, student socioeconomic background, academic performance, sector and level of first and current employment, earnings, promotion, and postgraduate education. Contains 51 references. (SV)
Descriptors: College Graduates, Education Work Relationship, Employed Women, Employment Patterns