Description |
1 online resource (xv, 416 pages) : illustrations |
Series |
Routledge research in gender and society ; 10 |
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Routledge research in gender and society ; 10.
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Contents |
Book Cover; Title; Contents; List of illustrations; Acknowledgments; Sex differences in labor markets; introduction; Family economics and sex differences in labor markets; Does marriage really make men more productive?; Marriage, motherhood, and wages; Sources of bias in women's wage equations: results using sibling data; Fertility timing, wages, and human capital; Relative income concerns and the rise in married women's employment; Testing for discrimination; Employers' discriminatory behavior and the estimation of wage discrimination; Sex discrimination and women's labor market outcomes |
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Sex discrimination in restaurant hiring: an audit studyWages, productivity, and worker characteristics: evidence from plant-level production functions and wage equations; Testing models of discrimination; Wage differentials by race and sex: the roles of taste discrimination and labor market information; Market forces and sex discrimination; Evaluating policy responses to sex differences and sex discrimination; New evidence on sex segregation and sex differences in wages from matched employer employee data |
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Are Affirmative Action hires less qualified?: evidence from employer employee data on new hiresWhat does Affirmative Action do?; Index |
Summary |
Annotation Sex differences abound in labor markets. In the United States three differences in particular have attracted the most attention: the earnings gap, occupational segregation, and the greater responsibility of women for child care and housework, and consequential lower participation in the labor market. This volume brings together David Neumark's work of the past fifteen years: in it he tries to understand and analyze the relative importance of family economic decision-making and sex discrimination in generating sex differences in labor markets. Neumark's research covers three main levels of inquiry. The first studies non-discriminatory sources of sex differences in labor markets; the second grapples with the problem of sex discrimination; while the third evaluates policies to combat and reduce sex differences in labor markets |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Sex discrimination in employment -- United States
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Sex discrimination in employment -- Government policy -- United States
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Affirmative action programs -- United States
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Pay equity -- United States
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Work and family -- United States
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Labor market -- United States
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BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Labor.
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POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Labor & Industrial Relations.
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Affirmative action programs
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Labor market
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Pay equity
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Sex discrimination in employment
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Sex discrimination in employment -- Government policy
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Work and family
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United States
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
0203799917 |
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9780203799918 |
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0415700132 |
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9780415700139 |
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