BACKGROUND: Empirical findings regarding the impact of women's employment on divorce are mixed. One explanation is that the effects are moderated by the country context. Another is that previous studies have failed to account for unobserved factors that introduce bias into the estimated effects. Studies also rarely consider possible anticipatory employment behavior on the part of women who are thinking of divorce. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to deepen our understanding of the nexus between women's employment and divorce in a comparative perspective. METHODS: We adopt an analytical strategy that allows us to account for selection and anticipation mechanisms. Namely, we estimate marital disruption and employment jointly, and monit...
We theorize how social policy affects marital stability vis-à-vis macro and micro effects of wives' ...
In this paper, we examine the role of the business cycle in divorce. To do so, we use a panel of 29 ...
We study US divorce rates, which despite the continuing rise in female labor force participation (FL...
The most common hypothesis on the positive association between wives’ work and divorce is that the w...
The most common hypothesis on the positive association between wives’ work and divorce is that the w...
The most common hypothesis on the positive association between wives ’ work and divorce is that the ...
'During the last decades, increases in divorce rates and female labor force participation have taken...
A discussion of the effects of partners’ labour force participation on marital stability has been pa...
Journal ArticleChanges in labor force participation and returns may have lessened divorce's traditio...
The specialization theory from Gary Becker is often used to explain the effect of women’s work on th...
The specialization theory from Gary Becker is often used to explain the effect of women’s work on th...
By using individual level panel data from 1995 to 1997, and running models with individual fixed eff...
This thesis consists of three papers that investigate the labour market activity of women following ...
The specialization theory from Gary Becker is often used to explain the effect of women’s work on th...
Abstract: Men’s and women’s employment trajectories following divorce is an important issue for anal...
We theorize how social policy affects marital stability vis-à-vis macro and micro effects of wives' ...
In this paper, we examine the role of the business cycle in divorce. To do so, we use a panel of 29 ...
We study US divorce rates, which despite the continuing rise in female labor force participation (FL...
The most common hypothesis on the positive association between wives’ work and divorce is that the w...
The most common hypothesis on the positive association between wives’ work and divorce is that the w...
The most common hypothesis on the positive association between wives ’ work and divorce is that the ...
'During the last decades, increases in divorce rates and female labor force participation have taken...
A discussion of the effects of partners’ labour force participation on marital stability has been pa...
Journal ArticleChanges in labor force participation and returns may have lessened divorce's traditio...
The specialization theory from Gary Becker is often used to explain the effect of women’s work on th...
The specialization theory from Gary Becker is often used to explain the effect of women’s work on th...
By using individual level panel data from 1995 to 1997, and running models with individual fixed eff...
This thesis consists of three papers that investigate the labour market activity of women following ...
The specialization theory from Gary Becker is often used to explain the effect of women’s work on th...
Abstract: Men’s and women’s employment trajectories following divorce is an important issue for anal...
We theorize how social policy affects marital stability vis-à-vis macro and micro effects of wives' ...
In this paper, we examine the role of the business cycle in divorce. To do so, we use a panel of 29 ...
We study US divorce rates, which despite the continuing rise in female labor force participation (FL...