Welfare, Work Experience, And Economic Self-Sufficiency
Preprint
- 1 January 2000
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
The potential of former AFDC recipients to earn a living wage is central to the success of welfare-to-work programs. Previous studies have found that welfare reKeywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- How Welfare Reform is Affecting Women's WorkAnnual Review of Sociology, 2000
- Anti-Poverty Policy for Families in the Next Century: From Welfare to Work—and WorriesJournal of Economic Perspectives, 2000
- Chapter 48 Race and gender in the labor marketHandbook of Labor Economics, 1999
- Swimming Upstream: Trends in the Gender Wage Differential in the 1980sJournal of Labor Economics, 1997
- Life after Welfare: Women, Work, and Repeat DependencyAmerican Sociological Review, 1996
- Explaining Occupational Sex Segregation and Wages: Findings from a Model with Fixed EffectsAmerican Sociological Review, 1988
- Sex-Related Wage Differentials and Women's Interrupted Labor Careers-the Chicken or the EggJournal of Labor Economics, 1988
- PANEL ESTIMATES OF THE EFFECTS OF CAREER INTERRUPTIONS ON THE EARNINGS OF WOMENEconomic Inquiry, 1984
- A Longitudinal Analysis of White Women's WagesThe Journal of Human Resources, 1983
- Work History, Labor Force Attachment, and Earnings Differences between the Races and SexesThe Journal of Human Resources, 1979