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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
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Davis, Kelly D.; Goodman, W. Benjamin; Pirretti, Amy E.; Almeida, David M. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2008
Data from two studies assessed the effects of nonstandard work schedules on perceived family well-being and daily stressors. Study 1, using a sample of employed, married adults aged 25-74 (n = 1,166) from the National Survey of Midlife in the United States, showed that night work was associated with perceptions of greater marital instability,…
Descriptors: Marital Instability, Working Hours, Family Work Relationship, Employment Patterns
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Smits, Jeroen; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1996
Studied effects of occupational status differences between spouses on the wife's employment and on her occupational achievement in European countries. Results show a tendency toward similarity in occupational status within marriages. Labor force participation of a wife is highest when her potential occupational status equals her husband's…
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employment, Employment Patterns
Lapkoff, Shelley; Fierst, Edith – 1980
Women are at a disadvantage under both Social Security and private employee pension plans because the retirement systems were set up at a time when most women were non-working spouses of employed men, a condition that no longer exists. Today women workers, divorcees, and widows of retirees often find themselves with inadequate retirement benefits…
Descriptors: Adults, Change Strategies, Displaced Homemakers, Divorce