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Hoffman, Saul D. – Monthly Labor Review, 1981
A recent national survey suggests that women and Blacks receive less on-the-job training and training opportunities in their jobs than White males. This is especially true of young Black men. The factor of low wage does not seem to play a large part in this discrepancy. (CT)
Descriptors: Blacks, Employed Women, Job Skills, Males
Kalcic, Dismas B. – 1974
This study was designed to explain the earnings differentials between metropolitan areas for six labor types, identified by level of education: 0-7, 8, 9-11, 12, 13-15, and 16 or more. Three separate models relate the average earnings of these types to several area variables. Multiple regression equations, based on 1960 Census and related data,…
Descriptors: Blacks, Cross Sectional Studies, Doctoral Dissertations, Educational Background

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
Browne, Irene, Ed. – 1999
The 13 chapters of this book, written by various sociologists, document how race and gender intersect to put African American and Latina women at a disadvantage in the workplace. The articles encompass 30 years of change for women at all levels of the workforce, from those who spend time on the welfare rolls to middle class professionals, and look…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Institute for Women's Policy Research, Washington, DC. – 1998
This book contains 78 of the approximately 100 conference papers presented, in 6 categories: democracy and society, employment and earnings, family and work, poverty and income, health and well being, and miscellaneous, as well as 7 poster session presentations. Representative papers include the following: "Women's Business Ownership: A…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Developed Nations, Disadvantaged

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
Crawford, Everett; And Others – 1991
The multidimensional nature of the diversity of the nation's labor force was examined, with emphasis on the economic diversity within the population generally and within and among the demographic groups. Principal activities were a literature review focusing on the economics of the labor market, analysis of data from the 1980 Census, and a…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indians, Blacks, Data Analysis
Gwartney-Gibbs, Patricia A.; Taylor, Patricia A. – Sage: A Scholarly Journal on Black Women, 1986
An examination of data from 1960 and 1980 reveals the following: (1) black women's earnings increased during these decades; (2) gaps in earnings remain between women and men; and (3) black women received more equitable treatment in government than in industry. The comparable worth policy and more affirmative action are necessary. (VM)
Descriptors: Black Employment, Blacks, Career Ladders, Economic Status

Reimers, Cordelia W. – American Journal of Sociology, 1984
After analyzing income differentials among different Hispanic groups, Blacks, and Anglos, the most important single reason for the lower family incomes of Hispanics and Blacks is lower wage rates. This is especially the case for men, but also for Mexican and Cuban women, even after differences in age, education and regional distribution are…
Descriptors: Blacks, Employed Women, Ethnic Discrimination, Family Income

Kimmel, Jean – Economics of Education Review, 1997
Examines racial and gender wage differences for rural workers, using wage equations derived from G.S. Becker's human capital model. With the rural focus, American Indian males and black females experience the weakest wage returns to education within their respective genders. Discrimination seems more prevalent in the rural female labor market,…
Descriptors: Blacks, Elementary Secondary Education, Racial Differences, Racial Discrimination
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
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
Abowd, John M.; Killingsworth, Mark R. – 1982
This paper has two purposes: (1) to examine whether Puerto Ricans, non-Puerto Rican Hispanics, and Blacks suffer substantial wage discrimination relative to comparable Whites; and (2) to examine the extent to which employers in the Federal and non-Federal sectors discriminate by race or ethnicity in making wage offers. After a discussion of…
Descriptors: Blacks, Comparative Analysis, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Ethnic Discrimination
National Commission on Working Women, Washington, DC. – 1988
These four fact sheets address a number of issues relating to women in the work force. The first, "An Overview of Women in the Work Force," offers a look at the numbers of women in the labor force, the occupational categories represented by women workers, women in professional and nonprofessional occupations, and women in nontraditional…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Career Education, Clerical Occupations