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Rank, Mark R. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1986
Examines the effect of family structure on the probability of exiting from welfare. Family structure is shown to have a sizable impact upon exiting welfare in both an aggregate and multivariate context, with female-headed families least likely to exit from public assistance. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Economic Change, Family Structure, Females, Heads of Households
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Hopkins, Thomas J. – Social Work, 1973
Social agencies should discard their negative assumptions about the black male ghetto resident. Agencies can provide positive experiences that support the black man's rightful role as head of his family and responsible member of the community. To illustrate this potential, guidelines that proved effective in work with a black fathers' group in…
Descriptors: Agency Role, Black Community, Black Stereotypes, Caseworkers
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Young, Anne M. – Monthly Labor Review, 1973
Special Labor Force Report shows mothers of almost 26 million children under age 18 were in the labor force in March 1972. (Editor)
Descriptors: Black Mothers, Children, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
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Tatham, Ronald L.; Dornoff, Ronald J. – Journal of Leisure Research, 1971
Descriptors: Cluster Grouping, Facility Utilization Research, Heads of Households, Leisure Time
Johnson, Charles E., Jr. – Illinois Teacher of Home Economics, 1982
Census Bureau information on the changing structure of the American family is examined. Discussed are types of households, one-parent families, women as sole financial contributors, working women, one-person households, delayed marriage, and divorce. (CT)
Descriptors: Divorce, Employed Parents, Employed Women, Family Life Education
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Bamundo, Paul J.; Kopelman, Richard E. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1980
Education and income had a strong impact on the job satisfaction-life satisfaction relationship. Occupation had a modest effect; self-employment had a stronger one. Age and job longevity had a strong curvilinear effect. These relationships become more relevant over time. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Employee Attitudes, Employment Level, Heads of Households
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Corcoran, Mary; And Others – Monthly Labor Review, 1980
According to a national survey, a majority of workers heard about their current jobs through friends and relatives. Informal channels were used more among young, less educated, and blue-collar workers, while women were less likely than men to have used such channels. (SK)
Descriptors: Blacks, Employment Opportunities, Females, Heads of Households
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Dahlin, Michel – Gerontologist, 1980
A sample of the aged derived from the 1900 federal manuscript census reveals that when aged parents and children coresided, the old were more often the heads of houses than their children. Unlike the aged today, they continued to work and to have children at home as they did in middle age. (Author)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Comparative Analysis, Family Life, Gerontology
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Lein, Laura – Family Coordinator, 1979
Boston-area families described the ambivalence of male responses to pressures of increased participation in homemaking. Because of different social support networks, men obtain little support and help in performing housework. Men perceiving paid employment as their primary contribution hesitate to acknowledge responsibility for homemaking…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Family Role, Heads of Households, Home Management
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Hood, Jane; Golden, Susan – Family Coordinator, 1979
Case studies examine men's family situations. Attempts to beat time by working from noon to midnight result in unintended negative consequences for one family. For another, creation of a split-shift family when a wife returns to work brings a father closer to his children and wife. (Author)
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Family Life, Family Role, Fathers
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Stinner, William F. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1977
This study analyzes urban-rural variations in Philippine household size and components of household size, as well as the relative contribution of these components to household size. Household size is larger in urban than in rural areas and the difference largely reflects the presence of extended family members and non-relatives. (Author)
Descriptors: Family (Sociological Unit), Family Structure, Heads of Households, Interaction Process Analysis
Morrissey, Elizabeth S. – Rural Development Perspectives, 1990
In 1987, 10 percent of rural families headed by a worker had incomes below poverty level. Worker poverty was related to working part of the year or part time; having children; or being under 25-years old, Black, Hispanic, a high school dropout, or a single female head of household. (SV)
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Employment, Family Income, Heads of Households
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Keith, Pat M.; Wickrama, K A. S. – Gerontologist, 1990
Interviewed 136 female heads of households in rural Sri Lanka. Found that marital status figured more importantly than age in use of health services. Concludes that, as unmarried heads of households increase in less developed places, their demands for health care at the village level likely will escalate. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Foreign Countries, Heads of Households, Health Needs
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Ntiri, Daphne W. – Western Journal of Black Studies, 2000
Explores the impact of the new welfare reform bill on female heads of households, arguing that the push for welfare recipients to end welfare dependency and enter the job market ill-prepared presents challenges in the home and the workplace. Suggests that adult educators' role in preparing low-skilled mothers for the workplace is central in…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Fatherless Family, Females, Heads of Households
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Frank, Reanne; Wildsmith, Elizabeth – Social Forces, 2005
This article provides an empirical test of the widely accepted assumption that migration contributes to union instability. The data come from the Mexican Migration Project (MMP) data base MMP93. We use multilevel discrete time event history analysis to specify the odds of union dissolution for male household heads by individual- and…
Descriptors: Social Control, Divorce, Foreign Countries, Migration Patterns
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