Women and Men at WorkIn this comprehensive overview of a growing domain of research, Reskin and Padavic examine how gender has shaped the meaning and performance of work. Patterns of sex inequality and segregation as well as the gendered nature of contemporary workplace cultures are demonstrated. The authors provide an especially useful - and critical - summary of economic theories of gender differences in workplace rewards, such as earnings and authority, as well as an insightful discussion of the interpenetration of family and work life. |
Contents
Work and Gender | 1 |
A History of Gendered Work | 15 |
An Overview of Sex Inequality at Work | 31 |
Copyright | |
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affirmative action African African-American African-American women assigned average Bielby blue-collar breadwinner role Census Chapter childcare clerical clerk coworkers culture customarily male jobs deskilling devaluation different jobs differentiation division of labor domestic economic employed employers employment equal ethnicity example experience factory federal female and male female jobs female occupations female workers groups hire Hispanic housework human-capital industries job ladders labor force participation male workers managers nurses organizations Padavic paid part-time pay discrimination pay equity pay gap ployers predominantly female production promotion gap race segregation Reskin responsibility role Rosabeth Moss Kanter sex and race sex differences sex discrimination sex inequality sex segregation sexual division sexual harassment skills societies statistical discrimination supervisor tasks tion U.S. Bureau U.S. Department U.S. Government Printing U.S. Supreme Court union United unpaid wages white women woman women less women workers women's and men's Women's Policy Research workforce workplace