Gender Equality in the Labour Market
- 28 October 1999
- book chapter
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP)
Abstract
The topic of this chapter is women's access to paid work and its impact on their economic resources compared to men in general and within the family. It presents a cross‐national portrait of gender inequality in the labour market in the early 1990s in 15 countries. Initially, the author focuses on labour market attachment (full‐time or part‐time work) and the earnings of working‐age women as a whole; subsequently, the analysis turns to married women and the mothers of young children. The chapter explores the extent to which welfare state regimes are associated with specific labour market outcomes.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- DEPENDENCE AND INDEPENDENCEGender & Society, 1995
- Trade and Jobs in U.S. ManufacturingBrookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1994
- Low Pay and Wage Regulation in the European CommunityBritish Journal of Industrial Relations, 1992
- Trends in Occupational and Industrial Sex Segregation in 56 Countries, 1960-1980Work and Occupations, 1992
- Legislation and Labour Market Gender Inequality: An Analysis of Oecd CountriesWork, Employment & Society, 1992
- Part-Time Work, Social Security Protections and Labour Law: an international comparisonPolicy & Politics, 1991
- A Cross-National Comparison of the Gender Gap in IncomeAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1990
- No Exit, No Voice: Women's Economic Dependency and the Welfare StateActa Sociologica, 1990
- Human Capital, Effort, and the Sexual Division of LaborJournal of Labor Economics, 1985
- Sex and Earnings in Industrial Society: A Nine-Nation ComparisonAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1983