+ Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several...

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+ Women and Paid Work Family Sociology

Transcript of + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several...

Page 1: + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women.

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Women and Paid WorkFamily Sociology

Page 2: + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women.

+Paid Work, Gender & Families

After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women has shown little growth in recent years

The participation rate for adult men has drifted down over time.

Mothers with older children have highest labor force participation rate

WHY?

Children are expensive!!

Page 3: + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women.

+Selected demographic characteristics

Women’s labor force participation rate peaked at 60.0 percent in 1999, following several decades of growth

In 2011, 58.1 percent of women were in the labor force, down 0.5 percentage point from 2010.

Page 4: + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women.
Page 5: + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women.

+Women’s Unemployment an race/ethnicity

Jobless rates varied by race and Hispanic ethnicity.

Asian women had the lowest rate (7.3 percent), followed by

White (7.5 percent), Hispanic (11.8 percent), and Black (14.1 percent) women.

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According to recent figures: the unemployment rate:

for men – 9.4% up from 4.4% in 1970

for women – 8.4% up from 5.9% in 1970

Recent figures on unemployment2013

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Employment and earnings online JanuaryRetreived from http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s0588.pdf, February 07, 2013

Page 7: + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women.

+Labor Force Participation among Mothers

The labor force participation rate of mothers with children under 18 years of age was 70.9 percent in March 2011,

down slightly from 2010.

Source: Data were collected in the 2011 Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the CPS. Retreived from http://www.bls.gov/cps/wlf-databook-2012.pdf, Jume 17, 2013

Page 8: + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women.

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Page 9: + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women.
Page 10: + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women.

Labor force participation is significantly higher among women today than it was in the 1970s,

particularly among women with children, and a larger share of women are working full time and year round.

Over the past 4 decades, women have made notable changes in their labor force activities.

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In addition, women have increasingly attained higher levels of education:

Among women ages 25 to 64 who are in the labor force, the proportion with a college degree roughly tripled from 1970 to 2011.

Over the past 4 decades, women have higher education attainment

Page 12: + Women and Paid Work Family Sociology. + Paid Work, Gender & Families After rising for several decades, the labor force participation rate for women.

+Over the past 4 decades, women earn more

Women’s earnings as a

proportion of men’s earnings also have grown over time.

In 1979, women working full time earned 62 percent of what men did; in 2011, women’s earnings were 82 percent of men’s

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+Male dominance in governmenthas declined only recently

Before 1992, there had never been more than 2 women among our 100 U.S. senators.

As of November 2012, we have 20 women Senators the highest number in U.S. history

(out of 100) 81+ women in House of Representatives

(out of 435)

Retreived from: http://www.senate.gov/CRSReports/crs-publish.cfm?pid='0E%2C*PLS%3D%22%40%20%20%0ARetreived

http://clerk.house.gov/member_info/cong.aspx

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+Changing Gender Composition of U.S. Congress

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+Male dominance in governmenthas declined only recently

A recent set of polls conducted BEFORE the last presidential election found:

67 - 71 percent believe the U.S. is ready to elect a woman president

Over 74 percent believe the U.S, is ready to elect an African/American/black candidate

Source: http://www.pollingreport.com/politics.htm://www.cawp.rutgers.edu/Facts/Elections/pres08_polls/Gallup_6in10.pdf

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+Women in the military

As of February 2013 women are now allowed to be in combat positions in the military

Why is this important?

Many people from the military go on to powerful positions in the government, business, and the military

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+Sociological Perspectives on Gender

Taking your husbands name ….

Some argue – it is just easier if couple and children have the same name –

Others argue - isn’t changing your name on all legal documents confusing and time consuming?

And why is it almost always women who change their names to their husbands’ name?

This is a holdover from older patriarchal customs

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+Summary

Summary Acting in gender appropriate ways reinforces gender

differences

Gender theorists argue that gender is socially constructed – in other words is socially created

Gender roles are created through economic and social constraints on women’s and men’s behavior and their ability to achieve equality

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+Summary

Summary

Men’s power is embedded in the social structure – this is changing as more women are employed

Women are working more and earning more and more but still very few have reached the top of business

And women are still outnumbered by men in high government positions

See COO of Facebook Cheryl Sandbergs book Lean In

Will we have a woman president soon?