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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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Baxter, Janeen; Haynes, Michele; Hewitt, Belinda – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
Does time spent in a cohabiting relationship prior to marriage lead to more egalitarian housework arrangements after marriage? Previous research has shown that housework patterns within cohabiting relationships are more egalitarian than in marital relationships. But do these patterns remain when couples marry? The findings from previous studies…
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Marriage, Interpersonal Relationship, Sex Role
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Fenge, Lee-Ann – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2009
Internationally there are growing numbers of migrant workers in the field of health who may represent an untapped resource in terms of workforce development. Although these workers often have higher-level skills and qualifications, they often find themselves in unskilled roles. This paper reports on a case study in the South West of England that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Migrant Workers, Housework, Health Services
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Gupta, Sanjiv – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2007
I argue that both the dominant models of the relationship between earnings and housework, economic dependence and gender display, have fundamental defects. They focus on the effect of women's earnings compared to their husbands' on their housework and ignore the possibility of an independent relationship between women's own earnings and their time…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Sex Role, Spouses, Females
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Cunningham, Mick – Journal of Family Issues, 2007
Drawing on data from a panel study of White women spanning 31 years, the analyses examine the influence of women's employment on the gendered division of household labor. Multiple dimensions of women's employment are investigated, including accumulated employment histories, current employment status, current employment hours, and relative income.…
Descriptors: Spouses, Income, Females, Employment Level
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Sampson, Joan M.; And Others – Home Economics Research Journal, 1975
This study was designed to determine factors that affect the employment status of the wife-mother and prove that these factors would be similar in both "typical" and "disadvantaged" samples. Three "universal variables" were: the husband's attitudes, youngest child's educational status, and frequency of family sharing the housework…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Disadvantaged, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
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Camacho, Agnes Zenaida V. – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 1999
Explored the complex interrelationship between the family, child work and migration, the role of the family in decision making and migration process, and the economic benefits of labor migration for the child's family. Found that migrants' family-based contacts in location and recruitment process were important. Determined priorities identified by…
Descriptors: Child Advocacy, Child Labor, Child Welfare, Childhood Attitudes
Wallace, Jean E. – 2002
Lawyers' work, home, and family demands and their strategies for coping with those demands were examined through telephone interviews with practicing lawyers from Calgary, Alberta. Of the 121 lawyers interviewed, 56 were men and 44 were women who worked full-time and 21 were women who worked part-time. Sixty-seven percent of them were associates…
Descriptors: Coping, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Employment Practices
Livingstone, D. W. – 2002
Canadians' employment and working patterns were examined by analyzing the 1998 survey called New Approaches to Lifelong Learning and other recent surveys by Statistics Canada. "Work" was defined as comprising household labor, community volunteer activities, and paid employment, and "learning" was defined as comprising informal…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Data Analysis, Definitions
Ng, Roxana; Wong, Renita Yuk-Lin; Choi, Angela – 1999
The current conditions of home workers in the garment industry in Toronto, Canada, were examined through in-depth telephone interviews with 30 Chinese-speaking immigrant women who were employed as home workers in 1999. The paper dicusses the formal training and informal learning experiences of immigrant woman who are garment workers. A comparison…
Descriptors: Child Care, Comparative Analysis, Compliance (Legal), Consciousness Raising