In this paper we study the effects of abusive behavior on the labor force and marital status decisions of women. Using a unique Canadian data set on domestic violence, we estimate the effects of abuse on the marital history as well as current employment using a sequential, multi-state model. In our model, spousal abuse affects labor supply through decreases in utility from leisure as well as through reductions in productivity at work and hence the market wage. In addition, abuse is treated as an initially unobserved spousal characteristic that plays a role in the divorce decision, which in turn influences labor supply. Our analysis reveals three main findings. First, the effects of domestic abuse on employment differ across marital historie...
This paper investigates the impact of intimate partner violence on the participation of women in the...
Domestic violence can interfere with women’s ability to work, and may result in loss of welfare bene...
This paper studies the effect on the risk of female victimization of the employment statuses of both...
In this paper we study the effects of abusive behavior on the labor force andmarital status decision...
Using unique, representative data on domestic violence, we document several styl-ized facts on abuse...
Domestic violence is pervasive in the United States, with one in three women and one in four men exp...
Is unemployment the overwhelming determinant of domestic violence that many commentators expect it t...
U.S. divorce laws underwent revolutionary changes during the 1970s as most states adopted no-fault d...
Does rising unemployment really increase domestic violence as many commentators expect? The contribu...
Seventy-one battered women were surveyed to explore the effect of battering on their employment stat...
We theorize how social policy affects marital stability vis-à-vis macro and micro effects of wives' ...
Rates of both intimate partner violence and poor health are high among low-income women This paper e...
This article studies the influence of women's work on the risk of divorce, using data from the Nethe...
We review the relationship between female labor supply and marital instability. Traditionally, the s...
This paper analyzes the causal relationship between unemployment and intimate-partner violence (IPV)...
This paper investigates the impact of intimate partner violence on the participation of women in the...
Domestic violence can interfere with women’s ability to work, and may result in loss of welfare bene...
This paper studies the effect on the risk of female victimization of the employment statuses of both...
In this paper we study the effects of abusive behavior on the labor force andmarital status decision...
Using unique, representative data on domestic violence, we document several styl-ized facts on abuse...
Domestic violence is pervasive in the United States, with one in three women and one in four men exp...
Is unemployment the overwhelming determinant of domestic violence that many commentators expect it t...
U.S. divorce laws underwent revolutionary changes during the 1970s as most states adopted no-fault d...
Does rising unemployment really increase domestic violence as many commentators expect? The contribu...
Seventy-one battered women were surveyed to explore the effect of battering on their employment stat...
We theorize how social policy affects marital stability vis-à-vis macro and micro effects of wives' ...
Rates of both intimate partner violence and poor health are high among low-income women This paper e...
This article studies the influence of women's work on the risk of divorce, using data from the Nethe...
We review the relationship between female labor supply and marital instability. Traditionally, the s...
This paper analyzes the causal relationship between unemployment and intimate-partner violence (IPV)...
This paper investigates the impact of intimate partner violence on the participation of women in the...
Domestic violence can interfere with women’s ability to work, and may result in loss of welfare bene...
This paper studies the effect on the risk of female victimization of the employment statuses of both...