This article investigates the relationship between labor force transitions and becoming a mother in the early twentieth century. It aims to answer the question: did women start industrial homework when they had their first child? The empirical material consists of 588 interviews made with individual industrial homeworkers in 1911. Event history models were used to analyze the data. The study found that many of the industrial homeworkers did start around the time they had their first child. The results thus suggest that in the early twentieth century, having a child did not always imply making a labor force transition out of the labor force but could also imply making a labor force transition to flexible types of employment, just as it often...
This dissertation examines the changing time allocation of men and women at the turn of the 21st cen...
In this paper, we analyze one of the early welfare interventions in the Swedish welfare state target...
During recent decades women have made considerable advances in education and the labor market, even ...
The papers in this dissertation explore women’s labour market decisions in the context of an industr...
By investigating changes in the association between women’s socioeconomic status, labor market activ...
This book deals with women and socioeconomic change in twentieth century Sweden. The main focus is o...
This article examines the employment patterns of new mothers from one year before the birth of their...
While women today often face a substantial wage penalty for childbearing, we show that this was not ...
Contrary to the expected negative link between rising female education and fertility it has been sho...
Today, Swedish women have one of the highest participation rates. In the nineteenth century, however...
Abstract We use data from Great Britain, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden to examine whether part...
We use data from Great Britain, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden to examine whether part-time and...
For the largest part of the 20th century a majority of all married women in Sweden worked as unpaid ...
The study examines the occurrence of children born out of wedlock in four parishes belonging to the ...
Female labor force participation increased significantly during the 20thcentury, not least in Sweden...
This dissertation examines the changing time allocation of men and women at the turn of the 21st cen...
In this paper, we analyze one of the early welfare interventions in the Swedish welfare state target...
During recent decades women have made considerable advances in education and the labor market, even ...
The papers in this dissertation explore women’s labour market decisions in the context of an industr...
By investigating changes in the association between women’s socioeconomic status, labor market activ...
This book deals with women and socioeconomic change in twentieth century Sweden. The main focus is o...
This article examines the employment patterns of new mothers from one year before the birth of their...
While women today often face a substantial wage penalty for childbearing, we show that this was not ...
Contrary to the expected negative link between rising female education and fertility it has been sho...
Today, Swedish women have one of the highest participation rates. In the nineteenth century, however...
Abstract We use data from Great Britain, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden to examine whether part...
We use data from Great Britain, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden to examine whether part-time and...
For the largest part of the 20th century a majority of all married women in Sweden worked as unpaid ...
The study examines the occurrence of children born out of wedlock in four parishes belonging to the ...
Female labor force participation increased significantly during the 20thcentury, not least in Sweden...
This dissertation examines the changing time allocation of men and women at the turn of the 21st cen...
In this paper, we analyze one of the early welfare interventions in the Swedish welfare state target...
During recent decades women have made considerable advances in education and the labor market, even ...