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Showing 1 to 15 of 34 results Save | Export
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Alonso, Lorena; Kohen, Raquel C. – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2023
In the aftermath of the financial and economic recession of 2008, 130 Spanish students of five age groups (8 to 17 years) and two socioeconomic backgrounds were individually interviewed about unemployment and lower wages. The participants were presented with two hypothetical situations, and their responses were qualitatively and quantitatively…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Unemployment, Economic Climate, Children
Kirsten Clinton – ProQuest LLC, 2021
In this dissertation, I explore inequalities in higher education and at the intersection of higher education and the labor market. Chapter 1 explores the employment effects of strengthening anti-discrimination laws for minority workers in the context of two recent changes to the Missouri Humans Rights Act. First, I use data from Missouri's circuit…
Descriptors: Labor, Economics, Labor Force, Higher Education
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Thiele, Megan; Pan, Yung-Yi Dian; Molina, Devin – Learning and Teaching: The International Journal of Higher Education in the Social Sciences, 2016
Karl Marx's revolutionary call, "Workers of the World Unite," resonates with many in today's society. This article describes and assesses an easily reproducible classroom activity that simulates both alienating, and perhaps more importantly, non-alienating states of production as described by Marx. This hands-on learning activity gives…
Descriptors: Alienation, Political Attitudes, College Students, Two Year Colleges
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Shafer, Emily Fitzgibbons – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2011
Economic theories predict that women are more likely to exit the labor force if their partners' earnings are higher and if their own wage rate is lower. In this article, I use the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (N = 2,254) and discrete-time event-history analysis to show that wives' relative wages are more predictive of their exit than are…
Descriptors: Wages, Spouses, Females, Employment Patterns
Heckman, James J.; Jacobs, Bas – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2010
Trends in skill bias and greater turbulence in modern labor markets put wages and employment prospects of unskilled workers under pressure. Weak incentives to utilize and maintain skills over the life-cycle become manifest with the ageing of the population. Policies to promote human capital formation reduce welfare state dependency among the…
Descriptors: Labor Force Nonparticipants, Human Capital, Tax Rates, Labor Market
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Fullerton, Andrew S.; Villemez, Wayne J. – Social Forces, 2011
Several recent studies across the social sciences show that the spatial agglomeration of employment in a local labor market benefits both firms and workers in terms of better firm performance and higher wages. Drawing from the organizational ecology perspective, we argue that workers receive higher wages in large industrial clusters and urban…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Urban Areas, Geographic Distribution, Social Environment
Botelho, Fernando Balbino – ProQuest LLC, 2011
The first chapter studies the effects of a teacher performance bonus program implemented in Brazil in 2008. The program covered all schools directly managed by the State of Sao Paulo government, and was based on a standardized test run by the state education authority. I use high-school exit exams organized by the federal government (ENEM) to…
Descriptors: Wages, Merit Pay, Females, Standardized Tests
Harcum, Emily – Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2009
When people think of New York, Wall Street and Broadway theaters come to mind most often but in fact the New York area is also a major center for higher education. Indeed, the New York metropolitan area is home to more than 240 private colleges and universities employing about 97,000 workers and attracting students and faculty from around the…
Descriptors: Wages, Higher Education, Private Colleges, Labor Market
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Aaronson, Daniel; French, Eric – Journal of Human Resources, 2009
This paper extends a standard intertemporal labor supply model to account for progressive taxation as well as the joint determination of hourly wages and hours worked. We show that these two factors can have implications for both estimating labor supply elasticities as well as for using these elasticities in tax analysis. Failure to account for…
Descriptors: Labor Supply, Models, Tax Rates, Correlation
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Wood, Clinton L.; Clevenger, Caroline M. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation is in need of several thousand houses to alleviate overcrowding and improve living conditions. The United States government has failed to provide appropriate or sufficient housing and other individuals and organizations that have attempted to build homes for the Lakota have met with widely varying results. This paper…
Descriptors: American Indians, Ownership, American Indian Reservations, Housing
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Timofeyev, Yuriy – Social Indicators Research, 2013
This paper clarifies the social and economic effects of employment in the informal sector on the poor in Russia in recent years. The article describes the extent to which the figures for informal sector at large and unofficial employment in particular vary in different estimates and the effect they have on the average labor income of the poor. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor, Wages, Poverty
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Monusova, Galina – Russian Education and Society, 2009
The question of how much a schoolteacher "should" be "worth" has been vigorously discussed recently by politicians and educators and, increasingly, by economists. Everyone agrees that teachers' compensation ought to be decent and a great deal higher than it is today. However, although spending on education as a whole and on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching (Occupation), Value Judgment, Teacher Salaries
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Hahner, Leslie A. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2009
The public circulation of temporal discourse fashions the way in which subjects experience and value their time. At the turn of the twentieth century, experts in systematic management mandated that wage-earning women must be prodded into efficient labor in order to increase the overall yield of industry. Against this regime of time, the narrator…
Descriptors: Labor, Time Perspective, Employed Women, Wages
University of Kentucky Center for Poverty Research, 2008
The secular increase over the past several decades in the number of families where both the husband and wife work in the paid labor force, coupled with the surge in labor force participation of single mothers in the 1990s, has heightened policy focus on child care options for working parents; federal and state governments are now major players…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Child Care, State Federal Aid, Public Policy
Lichtenstein, Nelson – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2011
When he was still President Obama's chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, now mayor-elect of Chicago, famously quipped: "Never allow a crisis to go to waste." Republican governors in Wisconsin, New Jersey, Ohio, and other states have certainly taken that advice to heart. By emphasizing, and in some cases manipulating, the red ink flowing through…
Descriptors: Municipalities, Social Class, Private Sector, Collective Bargaining
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