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Szymanski, Albert – Aztlan--International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, 1978
Latin Americans are displacing Blacks in the most menial and low paying positions as a rapidly increasing percentage of the various categories of dirty work are being occupied by Spanish speaking people. As Blacks move into less menial and better paying positions, a new underclass of Spanish speaking immigrant workers is being created. (Author/NQ)
Descriptors: Economics, Employment Patterns, Employment Statistics, Foreign Workers
Nord, David Paul – 1981
Library historians and historians of literacy have been more creative than journalism historians in using individual-level historical data such as deeds, wills, depositions, surveys, and census figures to study reading behaviors of the past. For example, the series of family cost of living surveys conducted in the United States by state and…
Descriptors: Audiences, Employment Statistics, Laborers, Media Research
Bureau of Labor Statistics (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1975
The following are some of the findings based on the results of the annual survey of marital and family characteristics of workers: (1) about 27.6 million of 62.7 million children had mothers in the labor force (over 2 million more than in March 1970); (2) 1.1 million of 6.5 million children under six were in families headed by women (71 percent…
Descriptors: Children, Comparative Analysis, Employed Parents, Employed Women
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Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Washington, DC. – 1980
This document is the first of two volumes of tables summarizing the data obtained from the Employer Information Reports (EEO-1) for 1978. Figures were obtained from a total of 39,000 employers with 36 million employees. These figures cover about half of all private, non-farm workers, as compared to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' annual average…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indians, Asian Americans, Blacks
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Washington, DC. – 1980
This document is the second of two volumes of tables summarizing the data obtained from the Employer Information Reports (EEO-1) for 1978. Figures were obtained from a total of 39,000 employers with 36 million employees. These figures cover about half of all private, non-farm workers, as compared to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' annual average…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indians, Asian Americans, Blacks