Social Science Quarterly, Volume 70Southwestern Social Science Association and the University of Texas, 1989 - Political science Includes section "Book reviews." |
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Page 129
... significant coefficients betray no consistent pattern . For example , in 1982-83 highly educated black women were significantly more likely than their male counterparts to express a liberal position on women's issues , but no such dif ...
... significant coefficients betray no consistent pattern . For example , in 1982-83 highly educated black women were significantly more likely than their male counterparts to express a liberal position on women's issues , but no such dif ...
Page 170
... significantly affect wages in the expected manner . The Mex variable is negative and significant in both models for the full pooled sample , but the remaining variable coefficients differ only slightly between the full sample and the ...
... significantly affect wages in the expected manner . The Mex variable is negative and significant in both models for the full pooled sample , but the remaining variable coefficients differ only slightly between the full sample and the ...
Page 384
... significant effects ; nor are age and race related to autonomy in these data . Equations ( 3 ) and ( 4 ) examine a qualitatively different form of workplace power - decision - making authority . The results indicate that women are sig ...
... significant effects ; nor are age and race related to autonomy in these data . Equations ( 3 ) and ( 4 ) examine a qualitatively different form of workplace power - decision - making authority . The results indicate that women are sig ...
Contents
Volume 70 Number | 1 |
The Division of Leisure and Work | 24 |
A Historical and Ethical | 40 |
Copyright | |
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allocation American analysis associated authority autonomy behavior benefits CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ changes cities coefficients demographic Denton County dependent variable differences disability distribution doctrine expansion earnings economic effect employment ethnic factors federal female gender gender gap government growth groups Hispanic hospital impact income increase individual industry inequality influence innovations institutional interaction intergovernmental intersectoral wage growth interviews issues Journal labor force participation labor market leisure long cycle male measure Mexican American National nomic occupational Okun's law patterns Pena percent Political Science population Press public trust doctrine quintile race rehabilitation medicine relationship response retirement Review role sample sector sex segregation significant SOCIAL SCIENCE QUARTERLY Social Security socioeconomic Sociology statistical status structure suggests survey Susan WELCH Table theory tion UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA University of Texas Urban variables voting women workers York