Volume 44 - Article 26 | Pages 609–626  

Educational gradients in nonstandard work schedules among mothers and fathers in the United Kingdom

By Afshin Zilanawala

References

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Crosby, D.A. and Hawkes, D.D. (2007). Cross‐national research using contemporary birth cohort studies: A look at early maternal employment in the UK and USA. International Journal of Social Research Methodology 10(5): 379‒404.

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Dunifon, R., Kalil, A., Crosby, D.A., and Su, J.H. (2013). Mothers’ night work and children’s behavior problems. Developmental Psychology 49(10): 1874‒1885.

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Enchautegui, M.E. (2013). Nonstandard work schedules and the well-being of low-income families. Washington, D.C: Urban Institute, Paper 26.

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Joshi, H. and Fitzsimons, E. (2016). The UK Millennium Cohort Study: The making of a multi-purpose resource for social science and policy in the UK. Longitudinal and Life Course Studies 7(4): 409‒430.

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Li, J., Johnson, S.E., Han, W.J., Andrews, S., Kendall, G., Strazdins, L., and Dockery, A. (2014). Parents’ nonstandard work schedules and child well-being: A critical review of the literature. The Journal of Primary Prevention 35(1): 53‒73.

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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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Mills, M. and Täht, K. (2010). Nonstandard work schedules and partnership quality: Quantitative and qualitative findings. Journal of Marriage and Family 72(4): 860‒875.

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Mostafa, T. and Wiggins, R.D. (2015). The impact of attrition and non-response in birth cohort studies: A need to incorporate missingness strategies. Longitudinal and Life Course Studies 6(2): 131‒146.

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Pilkauskas, N., Waldfogel, J., and Brooks-Gunn, J. (2016). Maternal labor force participation and differences by education in an urban birth cohort study ‒ 1998‒2010. Demographic Research 34(14): 407‒420.

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Presser, H.B. (2003). Working in a 24/7 economy: Challenges for American families. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.

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Presser, H.B. and Ward, B.W. (2011). Nonstandard work schedules over the life course: A first look. Monthly Labor Review 134(7): 3‒16.

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Putnam, R.D. (2016). Our kids: The American dream in crisis. New York: Simon and Schuster.

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Roantree, B. and Vira, K. (2018). The rise and rise of women’s employment in the UK. London: Institute for Fiscal Studies.

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Rosenbaum, E. and Morett, C.R. (2009). The effect of parents’ joint work schedules on infants’ behavior over the first two years of life: Evidence from the ECLSB. Maternal and Child Health Journal 13(6): 732‒744.

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Wight, V.R., Raley, S.B., and Bianchi, S.M. (2008). Time for children, one’s spouse and oneself among parents who work nonstandard hours. Social Forces 87(1): 243‒271.

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Zilanawala, A. (2017). Maternal nonstandard work schedules and breastfeeding behaviors. Maternal and Child Health Journal 21(6): 1308‒1317.

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Zilanawala, A., Abell, J., Bell, S., Webb, E., and Lacey, R. (2017). Parental nonstandard work schedules during infancy and children’s BMI trajectories. Demographic Research 37(22): 709‒726.

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