Thema Gender

clear
0 Filter gewählt
close
Gehe zur Seite
remove add
1560 Ergebnisse, ab 1191
  • SOEPpapers 469 / 2012

    Long-Distance Moves and Labour Market Outcomes of Dual-Earner Couples in the UK and Germany

    Chances are high that partners in dual-earner couples do not receive equal occupational returns from long-distance moves, because job opportunities are distributed heterogeneously in space. Which partners are more likely to receive relatively higher returns after moves? Recent research shows the stratification of returns by gender and highlights the importance of gender roles in mobility decisions. ...

    2012| Philipp M. Lersch
  • SOEPpapers 483 / 2012

    The Impact of Social Support Networks on Maternal Employment: A Comparison of West German, East German and Migrant Mothers of Pre-School Children

    Given shortages in public child care in Germany, this paper asks whether social support with child care and domestic work by spouses, kin and friends can facilitate mothers' return to full-time or part-time positions within the first six years after birth. Using SOEP data from 1993-2009 and event history analyses for competing risks, the author compares the employment transitions of West German, East ...

    2012| Mareike Wagner
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Maternal Employment and Gender Role Attitudes: Dissonance among British Men and Women in the Transition to Parenthood

    This study examines how changes in gender role attitudes of couples after childbirth relate to women's paid work and the type of childcare used. Identifying attitude-practice dissonances matters because how they get resolved influences mothers' future employment. Previous research examined changes in women's attitudes and employment, or spouses' adaptations to each others' attitudes. This is extended ...

    In: Work, Employment and Society 26 (2012), 3, S. 514-530 | Pia S. Schober, Jacqueline L. Scott
  • Externe Working Papers

    Occupational Sex Segregation and Management-Level Wages in Germany: What Role Does Firm Size Play?

    Bonn: IZA, 2012, 39 S.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 6568)
    | Anne Busch, Elke Holst
  • SOEPpapers 449 / 2012

    Explaining Age and Gender Differences in Employment Rates: A Labor Supply Side Perspective

    This paper takes a labor supply perspective (neoclassical labor supply, job search) to explain the lower employment rates of older workers and women. The basic rationale is that workers choose non-employed if their reservation wages are larger than the offered wages. Whereas the offered wages depend on workers' productivity and firms' decisions, reservation wages are largely determined by workers' ...

    2012| Stephan Humpert, Christian Pfeifer
  • SOEPpapers 446 / 2012

    What Makes Single Mothers Expand or Reduce Employment?

    To explore single mothers' labor market participation we analyze specific circumstances and dynamics in their life courses. We focus on the question which individual and institutional factors determine both professional advancement and professional descent. Due to dynamics in women's life course identifying and analyzing restrictions and interruptions of employment requires a longitudinal research ...

    2012| Mine Hancioglu, Bastian Hartmann
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1206 / 2012

    Occupational Sex Segregation and Management-Level Wages in Germany: What Role Does Firm Size Play?

    The paper analyzes the gender pay gap in private-sector management positions based on German panel data and using fixed-effects models. It deals with the effect of occupational sex segregation on wages, and the extent to which wage penalties for managers in predominantly female occupations are moderated by firm size. Drawing on economic and organizational approaches and the devaluation of women's work, ...

    2012| Anne Busch, Elke Holst
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 4 / 2012

    Top-Level Management in Large Companies: Persistent Male-Dominated Structures Leave Little Room for Women

    The aim of recruiting more women into top-level management positions in business is attracting increasing interest among the general public and policy-makers alike. Calls for a quota for women and the widely publicized appointment of four women to the executive boards of DAX 30 companies in 2011 still does not detract from the fact that women continue to play a marginal role in the most important economic ...

    2012| Elke Holst, Julia Schimeta
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 4 / 2012

    It Seems Only Sanctions Will Help: Six Questions to Elke Holst

    2012
  • DIW Economic Bulletin 4 / 2012

    Passed Over for Promotions: Women Still Severely Underrepresented on Financial Sector Boards

    Opportunities to increase the proportion of female board members in Germany's financial sector were missed during post-crisis period of management shakeups. As of 2011, the proportion of women on executive boards was still as low as in previous years: 3.2 percent in Germany's 100 largest banks and savings banks and 3.6 percent at 59 insurance companies surveyed. The percentage of women on supervisory ...

    2012| Elke Holst, Julia Schimeta
1560 Ergebnisse, ab 1191
keyboard_arrow_up