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American Economic Review | 1 |
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Davis, Elaine C. – Educational Horizons, 1975
Article focused on the reasons for the under employment of women and the myths that persist in spite of indisputable evidence to the contrary. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Bias, Employed Women, Employment Practices, Females

Hong, Lawrence K. – Social Problems, 1976
Ten female emigrants who have spent at least their entire childhood and adolescence in Communist China and eight Hong Kong Chinese who recently visited their relatives on the mainland were informally interviewed over a period of time. The composite picture that emerged suggests that women in China today have made significant progress toward…
Descriptors: Bias, Employed Women, Employment Opportunities, Family Role

Brown, Gary D. – Monthly Labor Review, 1978
Reports results of an approach using a multiple regression model to determine factors leading to larger male earnings and identifying potential discrimination with these factors, which included differences in the return to investment in human capital, rate of employment, type of employer, and return to experience. (TA)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Employment Practices, Employment Statistics
Christenson, Bruce A. – 1976
A socioeconomic life cycle model consisting of six temporally-ordered stages is used to compare the impact of family background, educational achievement, early occupational achievement, and current family and work role variables on the 1966 earning achievement of a nationally representative sample of black and white married women, ages 30 to 44. A…
Descriptors: Black Employment, Employed Women, Employer Attitudes, Employment

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

Frank, Robert H. – American Economic Review, 1978
A supply mechanism is described whereby nondiscriminating employers are expected to pay lower wages to females than to equally qualified males. Procedures are proposed to estimate the portion of the unexplained male-female wage differential that arises because of family locational considerations. Single copies available from the Secretary, C.…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Opportunities, Family Mobility, Females
Rieder, Corinne H. – American Education, 1977
Although it may lack the theatrics to win headlines, the struggle over equity for women in work is the essence of the feminist movement and an American social revolution. (Editor)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Practices, Employment Projections, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)

Suter, Larry E.; Miller, Herman P. – American Journal of Sociology, 1973
The analysis of incomes for men and women 30-44 years old in 1967 presented in this paper shows that by considering only educational level, occupational status, and work experience, we can predict the income level for women more confidently than for men. Women receive decidedly lower increments. (Author)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Females, Feminism
Staines, Graham; And Others – 1972
Using data originally report by others, this paper focuses on the relative merits of three separate statistical approaches to measuring occupational sex discrimination. The sample was a national probability sample of 539 women and 993 men. Demographic factors such as race, sex and age, education, job tenure and supervisory status served as the…
Descriptors: Demography, Employed Women, Income, Job Satisfaction
Steiger, JoAnn M.; Szanton, Eleanor S. – 1976
This document presents the conclusions and recommendations of a study conducted to explain the inequalities faced by low-income women in job training, employment, and earnings. The study explored the dimensions of the problems such women face, possible solutions, and the extent to which a group of Health Education and Welfare (HEW) and HEW-related…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Employed Women, Employment Problems, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)

Lynch, Michael; Post, Katherine – Public Interest, 1996
A recent study drawing on data from the Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics suggests that the wage gap between men and women has virtually disappeared, and that the so-called "glass ceiling" results more from age and qualifications than from explicit discrimination. (SLD)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Census Figures, Comparable Worth, Economic Factors
Arbus, Judith – 1978
By segregating women into the less responsible and lower paid jobs, the Canadian capitalist system has been able to have a source of cheap labor which represented no competition to the existing male labor force. For example, during the Great Depression, as available teaching positions dwindled, women teachers were compelled to accept small town…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Capitalism, Elementary Secondary Education, Employed Women
Fong, Pauline L.; Cabezas, Amado Y. – 1976
This report deals with the employment and economic status of Asian and Pacific women in the United States. Data collected for a set of socioeconomic variables were analyzed and interpreted. Variables were analyzed by specific Asian ethnicity and by age. Data aggregated at the standard metropolitan statistical area level were used whenever…
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Economic Status, Employed Women, Employment Level
Sandell, Steven H.; Shapiro, David – 1976
This paper discusses specification and interpretation of human capital models of women's earnings when data on actual work experience are available. It uses the segmented earnings function framework developed by Jacob Mincer and Solomon Polachek and considers the effects of data errors, issues involving data interpretation, consequences of model…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Educational Background, Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Bomboy, Marylee – VocEd, 1979
Despite the increased number of women workers and sex fairness federal legislation, the earning power and job status of women workers has not increased. The earnings gap between men and women has actually widened. The author looks at ways to improve the situation through education and training. (MF)
Descriptors: Career Development, Employed Women, Equal Education, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)