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Showing 1 to 15 of 28 results Save | Export
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Spreitzer, Elmer; Riley, Lawrence E. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1974
This study is concerned with examining the structural and interactional features of the person's childhood family of orientation as they relate to never marrying as an adult. Separate analysis is carried out for males and females throughout the paper. (Author)
Descriptors: Children, Individual Development, Interpersonal Relationship, Males
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Butler, Matilda; Paisley, William – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1977
Biographic data from the 1958 and 1973 APA membership directories provide information on the status of professional couples in psychology. The "professional couple syndrome" is examined as well as myths surrounding explanations of the greater success of husbands. Husbands hold higher positions than their wives. (Author)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Females, Males, Marital Status
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Etaugh, Claire; Malstrom, Joann – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1981
Female and male college students read a description of a person and rated the individual on 20 bipolar scales describing personal traits and professional performance characteristics. Results indicated married individuals were evaluated more favorably than all groups of unmarried individuals. Males and females were perceived similarly on most…
Descriptors: College Students, Divorce, Females, Individual Characteristics
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Gove, Walter; Hughes, Michael – American Sociological Review, 1979
In this paper, the question of why women have higher morbidity rates than men is examined. Data indicate that when marital status, living arrangements, psychiatric symptoms, and nurturant role obligations are controlled, health differences between men and women disappear. (Author/WI)
Descriptors: Death, Females, Life Style, Males
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Perrucci, Carolyn Cummings – Sociology and Social Research, 1978
In the prediction of 1964 income for a national sample of 1961 college graduates, there were significant gender effects, and marital status interactions for women but not for men. Income for both was positively influenced by graduate educational attainment, occupational status, years of work experience, age, hours worked weekly, college…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Graduates, Comparative Analysis, Employed Women
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Askham, Janet – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1976
It is suggested that it is often in intimate relationships that people seek to develop and maintain both a sense of personal identity and a sense of stability. By outlining some of the major conditions required for the carrying out of these two activities it is shown that they are in potential conflict. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Females, Identification (Psychology), Interpersonal Relationship
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Kane, Emily W.; Sanchez, Laura – Social Forces, 1994
A public opinion survey of 1,750 U.S. adults provided data on men's and women's criticism of gender inequality at home and work. Controlling for age (negatively related to home criticism), education (positively related to home and work criticism), and several social class factors, home criticism was negatively related to parenthood for men and to…
Descriptors: Family Life, Family Relationship, Females, Feminism
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Treiman, Donald J.; Terrell Kermit – American Sociological Review, 1975
The process of educational, occupational, and income attainment of working women and men, both white and non-white, is compared here. The process and level of educational and occupational attainment is said to be identical for men and women, but women are said to earn less. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis, Employed Women, Employment Opportunities
Bikson, Tora K.; Goodchilds, Jacqueline D. – 1978
A common assumption, reflective of data obtained from older males, often in institutional or outpatient settings, is that being old and alone is a severely negative condition. A sample of 300 older men and women in community settings provides an alternative perspective. For a number of daily living activities as well as personal and interpersonal…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Emotional Adjustment, Females
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Westman, Mina; Etzion, Dalia – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1990
Reactions to 4 versions of a vignette describing a successful manager were obtained from 233 management students, including 50 executives in an extension course. Career success was perceived as a major cause of personal failure. The personal price paid by successful people was perceived differently depending on gender and marital status. (SK)
Descriptors: Achievement, Administrators, Failure, Family Problems
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Roberts, Robert E.; Roberts, Catherine Ramsay – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 1982
Mexican American women reported more depressive symptoms than men (after controlling for effects of age, education, income) in two surveys conducted in Alameda County, California (1975, 1978). Among the married, the employed reported fewer symptoms than the nonemployed; there was no difference in depression scores of employed men and women.…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Depression (Psychology), Employment, Females
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Tweed, Dan L.; Jackson, David J. – Social Forces, 1981
Employs log linear and logit techniques in order to model male-female differences in the odds of a mental disorder, as affected by marital status, age, and residential location. Suggests that sex differences may be expressed in terms of a model with main effects only. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Age, Females, Males, Marital Status
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Trovato, Frank; Lauris, Gloria – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1989
Used Canadian mortality census data from 1959 through 1981 to examine relationship between marital status transitions of men and women and mortality from neoplasms and cardiovascular diseases. Found lower death rate among marrieds. Found men had greater mortality risk reduction from state of marriage than women. (Author/CM)
Descriptors: Cancer, Disease Incidence, Divorce, Females
Anderson, Kim; And Others – 1978
The effect of gender on retirement attitudes among college faculty and other university professionals were studied, and variables that might affect attitudes toward retirement were investigated. A 35-item questionnaire was mailed to all faculty and nonteaching professionals at a university center, a four-year college, and a community college of…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Females, Higher Education, Males
Garfinkel, Irwin; And Others – 1978
Data from the Current Population Survey of 1971 are used in this paper to investigate the ways in which various population groups utilize their earnings capacity. The hypotheses tested in this paper are: (1) that groups are poor primarily because they fail to utilize their earnings potential effectively; and (2) that the high incidence of poverty…
Descriptors: Blacks, Economic Opportunities, Economic Status, Employment Opportunities
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