This article reviews the evidence pertaining to changes in Womens relative pay during the War and presents new evidence relating to important wartime manufacturing industries. It is argued that gender pay inequality declined sharply where women were employed in industries that had been previously dominated by men. Generally, this did not occur in industries that had traditionally been important areas of female employment during the first decades of the Twentieth century. This is consistent with a combination of excess demand effects and institutional factors, both of which were strongest in wartime munitions industries. Because of the importance of these industries to the war economy, the behaviour of inequality in munitions dominates the b...
Fieseler B, Hampf MM, Schwarzkopf J. Gendering combat: Military women's status in Britain, the Unite...
Previous research suggests that WWII induced a lasting increase in American female labor force parti...
During the 1940s, the diversion of 55% of the workforce to wartime production, the induction of over...
This article examines the effect of total war on inequalities in pay in munitions industries in Brit...
This study challenges the use of the gross increase in female participation rate--prewar to postwar-...
The 1940's were a turning point in married women's labor force participation, leading many to credit...
This article examines the attempts by the Dundee jute industry to recruit women workers in the years...
This article examines the attempts by the Dundee jute industry to recruit women workers in the years...
A major new study of the role of women in the labor market of Industrial Revolution Britain. It is w...
Mobilisation on the Australian ‘home front’ during the Second World War enabled some women to move t...
World War I, the first large-scale twentieth century conflict, in addition to demanding enlarged mil...
This article presents a study on the quantification of the level of occupational access and wage dis...
In most societies gender stereotyped roles attribute to men combative functions related to defence a...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>This study is availabl...
In Britain, female labor force participation rose steadily from the Second World War to 1977. To exp...
Fieseler B, Hampf MM, Schwarzkopf J. Gendering combat: Military women's status in Britain, the Unite...
Previous research suggests that WWII induced a lasting increase in American female labor force parti...
During the 1940s, the diversion of 55% of the workforce to wartime production, the induction of over...
This article examines the effect of total war on inequalities in pay in munitions industries in Brit...
This study challenges the use of the gross increase in female participation rate--prewar to postwar-...
The 1940's were a turning point in married women's labor force participation, leading many to credit...
This article examines the attempts by the Dundee jute industry to recruit women workers in the years...
This article examines the attempts by the Dundee jute industry to recruit women workers in the years...
A major new study of the role of women in the labor market of Industrial Revolution Britain. It is w...
Mobilisation on the Australian ‘home front’ during the Second World War enabled some women to move t...
World War I, the first large-scale twentieth century conflict, in addition to demanding enlarged mil...
This article presents a study on the quantification of the level of occupational access and wage dis...
In most societies gender stereotyped roles attribute to men combative functions related to defence a...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>This study is availabl...
In Britain, female labor force participation rose steadily from the Second World War to 1977. To exp...
Fieseler B, Hampf MM, Schwarzkopf J. Gendering combat: Military women's status in Britain, the Unite...
Previous research suggests that WWII induced a lasting increase in American female labor force parti...
During the 1940s, the diversion of 55% of the workforce to wartime production, the induction of over...