Sentences with phrase «women in the labor market»

«Vocal fry» hurts women in the labor market

Not exact matches

A tight labor market due to the shrinking population and the ongoing economic recovery are also factors, flattening Japan's M - shaped curve, a graph showing that female participation in the workforce dips when women marry and have children.
«The Australian labor market and world labor market just consistently and amazingly undervalues women in so many roles, particularly in our industry,» he said.
Relatively privileged Christians in the U.S. must consider the likelihood that the procurement of requisite ova will follow the predictable patterns of women's labor in an exploitative global market.
This isn't about privileged women saying «breast is best» (a woman's choice how to feed her child is her own)-- it is about misleading, unethical, and in some cases illegal marketing practices, illegally sourcing milk from a horrible dictator, and the use of slave labor.
Women living in 3rd world countries (and perhaps those few living in backwaters of developed countries) whose time really is «worth nothing» in the labor market, are not reading the SOB for tips on how to save money on infant feeding.
Chapter 1 looks at women's growing presence in the labor market and explores changing attitudes about work.
«I think it's fair to say that the women who have run the gauntlet and gotten advanced STEM degrees will find the labor market quite welcoming if they choose to seek employment in academic STEM jobs,» writes Jennifer Glass, a sociologist at the University of Texas, Austin, in an e-mail.
For women entering the labor market directly after graduation from high school in 1972, those with mastery of basic mathematical skills earned $ 0.78 per hour ($ 1,560 per year) more at age 24 than did those with weak math skills.
This explains why, between 1990 and 2009, men present similar employment rates — regardless income - while women from low income households barely participate in the labor market, not only in comparison to their female peers but to men as well.
Thirdly, gender inequality - and its reflection in labor market participation of poorer women - should be in the center of the debate about youth policy, urgently focusing on the development of a care system.
Plus, Ch Finn calls us «marriage wreckers» we are mostly women... as in the home health care labor market — mostly female so I see it as the war on women — the oldest war in the universe.
Despite significant changes in the labor market broadening opportunities for women and rising expectations for the role of teachers and schools, these structures and incentives have persisted almost unchanged to the present.
Inequality leads to perceptions of inequity when the woman encounters low time availability (i.e., is strongly involved in the labor market), when resource dependence is low, and when the woman adheres to a nontraditional gender ideology.»
No - fault divorce laws were adopted beginning with California in 1969 and then spread to all 50 states.5 During the 1960s and 1970s, legal access to birth control including oral contraceptives became increasingly available, and in 1973 the U.S. Supreme Court made abortion legal in the landmark Roe v. Wade decision.6 These cultural changes created new opportunities for women and led to an increased presence in the labor market, doubling from 30.3 million in the 1970s to 72.7 million in the mid - 2000s.7
Ensuring that women can exercise their reproductive rights and access affordable reproductive health care services will reflect a society that values women and provides them the opportunity to fully engage in the labor market.
The correlation with main occupation during childhood is probably high, though, but some studies indicate that men's and women's positions in the labor market change in conjunction with divorce and separation (see e.g., Evertsson 2001).
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