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 663
This supports Oppenheimer's ( 1970 ) arguments concerning the role of demand for female workers in increasing female participation . The crude birth rate has modest negative effects on female share , but weaker effects on female ...
This supports Oppenheimer's ( 1970 ) arguments concerning the role of demand for female workers in increasing female participation . The crude birth rate has modest negative effects on female share , but weaker effects on female ...
Page 665
Other studies emphasize only one explanation or one type of variable , and may oversimplify cross - national patterns of female participation . These results show support for several of the explanations and suggest that multivariate ...
Other studies emphasize only one explanation or one type of variable , and may oversimplify cross - national patterns of female participation . These results show support for several of the explanations and suggest that multivariate ...
Page 678
labor force when female participation increases . This assumes zero - sum competition over jobs , and that females must take jobs away from males . This is a narrow way to define competition . Our argument is that females take male jobs ...
labor force when female participation increases . This assumes zero - sum competition over jobs , and that females must take jobs away from males . This is a narrow way to define competition . Our argument is that females take male jobs ...
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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