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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
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Anders Nelson; Andreas Ivarsson; Marie Lydell – Higher Education, Skills and Work-based Learning, 2025
Purpose: This study aims to explore a specific case of the alleged mismatch between higher education and employability by investigating long-term work life outcomes for graduates from a small university college in Sweden, and the associations between these outcomes and the graduates' social background, academic achievements and study approach in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employment Potential, Family Work Relationship, Education Work Relationship
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Baumer de Azevedo, Maria Candida; De Hauw, Sara; Semeijn, Judith; van Vuuren, Tinka – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2022
Parallel career tracks have become more prevalent today, especially in Brazil, where more than a quarter of all postgrads have one. Despite its growing popularity, little research has tapped into this new career phenomenon. This study examines whether having a parallel career track leads to negative work outcomes related to sustainable careers,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Career Development, Career Pathways, Sustainability
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Janine Jongbloed; Johanna Turgetto; Lesley Andres; Wolfgang Lauterbach – Journal of Education and Work, 2024
This article compares the education, employment, and care work biographical sequences of Canadian and German women and men from late adolescence into mid-adulthood. Through the lenses of comparative gendered life course theory and welfare regime theory, sequence and cluster analyses are used to determine the adult life course sequences of women…
Descriptors: Education, Child Caregivers, Family Environment, Late Adolescents
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Arday, Jason – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
Precarious employment is considered a social determinant impacting the health of workers, families and communities. The Academy is known to utilise non-standard employment contracts, coming under widespread criticism from its social partners for exploitative practices. Whilst there is much research suggesting certain groups (e.g. early career…
Descriptors: Racism, Employment Patterns, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Minority Groups
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Chou, Yueh-Ching; Wang, Shih-Chih; Chang, Heng-Hao; Fu, Li-Yeh – Journal of Intellectual & Developmental Disability, 2014
Background: Earlier research shows that nonemployed mothers of children with intellectual disability (ID) have lower wellbeing than employed mothers. This study explored why and to what extent these mothers did not participate in the labour market. Method: An in-depth interview was employed, and 18 working-age and nonemployed mothers in Taiwan who…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mothers, Unemployment, Adults
OECD Publishing, 2017
Gender inequalities persist in all areas of social and economic life and across countries. Young women in OECD countries generally obtain more years of schooling than young men, but women are less likely than men to engage in paid work. Gaps widen with age, as motherhood typically has marked negative effects on gender pay gaps and career…
Descriptors: Sex Fairness, Educational Trends, Violence, Females
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Baslevent, Cem; Kirmanoglu, Hasan – Social Indicators Research, 2013
We examine whether employees' preferences for various job attributes are associated with their individual characteristics in ways that are in line with "hierarchy of needs" theories. Using data from the fifth round of the European Social Survey, we observe the influence of socio-demographic and dispositional characteristics as well as…
Descriptors: Educational Opportunities, Individual Characteristics, Values, Foreign Countries
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Ornstein, Michael; Stalker, Glenn J. – Journal of Family Issues, 2013
Based on the 2006 Canadian Census "long form" sample of one in every five households, the authors develop a detailed typology of family strategies for employment and the care of preschool children. The analysis is restricted to opposite-sex couples with at least one child under age 6 and no older child or other adult in the household.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employment Patterns, Preschool Children, Employed Parents
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Nieuwenhuis, Rense; Need, Ariana; Van Der Kolk, Henk – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2012
This study combined demographic and institutional explanations of women's employment, describing and explaining the degree to which mothers in industrialized societies are less likely to be employed than women without children. A large number of cross-sectional surveys were pooled, covering 18 Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development…
Descriptors: Mothers, Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries, Females
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Fleet, Alma; Wechmann, Kerrie; Whitworth, Ryan – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2012
Little information is available about the employment trajectories of Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander peoples pursuing university professional qualifications. This article describes a context in which cultural space, issues of identity, pragmatics of employment, family and community and a bureaucratic regulatory environment intersect to…
Descriptors: Qualifications, Indigenous Populations, Educational Opportunities, Employment Patterns
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Buchholz, Sandra; Blossfeld, Hans-Peter – New Directions for Youth Development, 2012
There is no doubt that the labor markets and economies of modern societies have been confronted by a marked intensification of cross-border exchange between modern states that has attained a new and previously unattained quality over the past thirty years. In the economic and sociological literature, this development is usually labeled…
Descriptors: Living Standards, Foreign Countries, Employment Patterns, Economic Change
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Craig, Lyn; Mullan, Killian – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2010
Research has associated parenthood with greater daily time commitments for fathers and mothers than for childless men and women, and with deeper gendered division of labor in households. How do these outcomes vary across countries with different average employment hours, family and social policies, and cultural attitudes to family care provision?…
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries, Family Work Relationship, Gender Differences
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Hakim, Catherine – Work and Occupations: An International Sociological Journal, 2002
A 1999 British survey of 1,960 females and 1,691 males incorporated preference theory. Results showed that women's lifestyle preferences are a major determinant of fertility, employment patterns, and job choice. However, lifestyle preferences no longer determine occupational choice. (Contains 71 references.) (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Career Choice, Employment Patterns, Family Work Relationship
Hamermesh, Daniel S. – 1996
This book studies work in the United States and Germany from two new viewpoints: (1) the division of work time into hours per day and days per week (as opposed to the standard analysis of weekly hours of work); and (2) the patterns of the particular times of the day and week when people are working, a focus on instantaneous time use. Information…
Descriptors: Adults, Developed Nations, Employed Parents, Employment
Waterhouse, Peter; Wilson, Bruce; Ewer, Peter – 1999
An overview of recent literature on changes in the nature and patterns of work and their implications for vocational education and training (VET) is offered. Changes in the nature and patterns of work present significant challenges to the VET sector. More women have entered the work force; unemployment has reemerged as a significant factor;…
Descriptors: Change, Educational Policy, Employed Women, Employment Opportunities
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