Social Science Quarterly, Volume 66Southwestern Social Science Association and the University of Texas, 1985 - Political science Includes section "Book reviews." |
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Page 636
Wages Wage in Male Occupations Wage in Female Occupations FIGURE 3 Depiction of Crowding in Female Occupations Supply Curve for Male Occupations Supply Curve for Female Occupations Demand Curve Quantity Employed NOTE : The supply curve ...
Wages Wage in Male Occupations Wage in Female Occupations FIGURE 3 Depiction of Crowding in Female Occupations Supply Curve for Male Occupations Supply Curve for Female Occupations Demand Curve Quantity Employed NOTE : The supply curve ...
Page 681
guises important changes in the sex composition of specific occupations between 1940 and 1950 , and that it is misleading to suggest that by 1950 all occupations were more evenly distributed on the basis of gender as compared to ...
guises important changes in the sex composition of specific occupations between 1940 and 1950 , and that it is misleading to suggest that by 1950 all occupations were more evenly distributed on the basis of gender as compared to ...
Page 685
... occupations , with 18.5 percent entering clerical and sales work ; while 25 percent of women previously in school entered operative work , and 44.3 percent become clerical and sales workers . One may posit that each occupation displays ...
... occupations , with 18.5 percent entering clerical and sales work ; while 25 percent of women previously in school entered operative work , and 44.3 percent become clerical and sales workers . One may posit that each occupation displays ...
Contents
Metropolitan Development and the Changing Journey to Work | 519 |
An Empirical | 533 |
The Regulatory Policy Cycle and the Airline Deregulation Movement | 552 |
Copyright | |
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action analysis areas average candidates characteristics coefficients comparable competition concern consumer correlation decision demand determine differences differential discrimination distribution earnings economic effect election equation experience explain factors female findings greater groups human impact important included income increase indicate individuals industry influence institutional interest issues Journal labor force less major male Marxism mean measure Mexican American noted occupations organizations participation percent period political Political Science population positions present Press problems programs question regression relationship relative reported residents response Review rules sample scores significant Social Science Society Sociology status structure suggest Table Texas theory tion unemployment University urban values variables voting wage women workers York