In this paper we use newly available individual-level data from the Longitudinal Survey of Italian Households to investigate the factors associated with female labour force participation after the birth of the first child. We focus on the role of pre-marital job characteristics and find that new mothers who worked without a contract are less likely to participate, while those who worked in the public sector or in a large private firm have a higher probability of being in the labour force after childbearing. We suggest that these effects could be at least partly attributed to differences in the level of job protection and employment stability enjoyed by workers. This implies that in Italy women with highly protected and stable jobs ...
Economic models of household behavior typically yield the prediction that increases in schooling lev...
The paper analyses the relationship between reproductive behaviour and working career of the woman o...
This article studies mothers’ employment transitions around childbirth. It argues that leaving emplo...
In this paper we use newly available individual-level data from the Longitudinal Survey of Italian ...
In this paper we use newly available individual-level data from the Longitudinal Survey of Italian H...
In this paper we use newly available individual-level data from the Longitudinal Survey of Italian H...
This thesis is made of three related yet independent empirical studies, exploring the determinants o...
AbstractIn the last decades, female participation in the labour market has been found to be increasi...
This paper uses a dataset built by the author on the basis of raw data taken from different national...
This article studies mothers’ employment transitions around childbirth. It argues that leaving emplo...
In Italy in 2011, the employment rate for women between the ages of 25 and 54 was 64%, compared with...
In this paper we focus in particular on the participation of women with children, considering the pe...
Exiting studies have shown the work-family conflict to be stronger in familialistic welfare regimes ...
The importance of the participation of women in the labour market and source of policy-marking inter...
Maternal employment is still below the overall EU recommended level of 60% in many European countrie...
Economic models of household behavior typically yield the prediction that increases in schooling lev...
The paper analyses the relationship between reproductive behaviour and working career of the woman o...
This article studies mothers’ employment transitions around childbirth. It argues that leaving emplo...
In this paper we use newly available individual-level data from the Longitudinal Survey of Italian ...
In this paper we use newly available individual-level data from the Longitudinal Survey of Italian H...
In this paper we use newly available individual-level data from the Longitudinal Survey of Italian H...
This thesis is made of three related yet independent empirical studies, exploring the determinants o...
AbstractIn the last decades, female participation in the labour market has been found to be increasi...
This paper uses a dataset built by the author on the basis of raw data taken from different national...
This article studies mothers’ employment transitions around childbirth. It argues that leaving emplo...
In Italy in 2011, the employment rate for women between the ages of 25 and 54 was 64%, compared with...
In this paper we focus in particular on the participation of women with children, considering the pe...
Exiting studies have shown the work-family conflict to be stronger in familialistic welfare regimes ...
The importance of the participation of women in the labour market and source of policy-marking inter...
Maternal employment is still below the overall EU recommended level of 60% in many European countrie...
Economic models of household behavior typically yield the prediction that increases in schooling lev...
The paper analyses the relationship between reproductive behaviour and working career of the woman o...
This article studies mothers’ employment transitions around childbirth. It argues that leaving emplo...