Volume 34 - Article 14 | Pages 407–420  

Maternal labor force participation and differences by education in an urban birth cohort study - 1998-2010

By Natasha Pilkauskas, Jane Waldfogel, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn

References

Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor (2014). Labor force participation rate of mothers by age of own child, March 1976−2012 [electronic resource]. Washington, D.C., US Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor (2009). Labor force participation rate of women by age of youngest child, March 1975−2007 [electronic resource]. Washington, D.C., The Editors Desk, US Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Coley, R.L., Lohman, B.J., Votruba-Drzal, E., Pittman, L.D., and Chase-Lansdale, P.L. (2007). Maternal functioning, time, and money: The world of work and welfare. Children and Youth Services Review 29(6): 721−741.

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Dunifon, R., Kalil, A., Crosby, D.A., Su, J.H., and DeLeire, T. (2013). Measuring maternal nonstandard work in survey data. Journal of Marriage and Family 75(3): 523−532.

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Hoynes, H.W., Miller, D.L., and Schaller, J. (2012). Who suffers during recessions? National Bureau of Economic Research.

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Hynes, K. and Clarkberg, M. (2005). Women's employment patterns during early parenthood: A group-based trajectory analysis. Journal of Marriage and Family 67(1): 222−239.

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McLanahan, S. (2004). Diverging destinies: How children are faring under the second demographic transition. Demography 41(4): 607−627.

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Moen, P. (1985). Continuities and discontinuities in women's labor force participation. In: Elder Jr., G.H. (ed.). Life course dynamics: trajectories and transitions, 1968−1980. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press: 113−155.

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Putnam, R.D. (2015). Our kids: The American dream in crisis. New York, NY: Simon and Schuster.

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Sum, A. and Khatiwada, I. (2010). Labor underutilization problems of U.S. workers across household income groups at the end of the Great Recession: A truly great depression among the nation’s low income workers amidst full employment among the most affluent. Boston: Center for Labor Market Studies, Northeastern University.

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Vandenheuvel, A. (1997). Women’s roles after first birth. Variable or stable? Gender & Society 11(3): 357−368.

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