The large-scale movement of women into the paid labor market has brought sweeping change into family life and also in who cares for the elderly and children. This brief studies workers in two low wage, predominantly female care-giving occupations plagued with high turnover, direct care workers and child care workers. It provides a better understanding of how they fare when compared with other female workers and discusses factors that contribute to their continued employment
More and more women with young or school-age children are now going out to work. If the father works...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2017-08Background: The rise of contingent work arrangem...
Purpose:A shift in the direct care workforce from aides trained to provide medical services to those...
This brief examines overtime hours and hourly wages among home care workers (home health aides and p...
Over one million women are employed in child care and are among the lowest wage workers in the US. T...
Child care workers’ wages have been an issue that has plagued the early childhood education field fo...
As the baby boom cohort nears retirement age, the question of how to provide necessary health care a...
This paper explores how the responsibilityof caring for children affects employment stability by stu...
Direct care workers, including nursing assistants, home health aides, and personal and home care aid...
Care work is essential to meet the basic needs and wellbeing of any society. However, the U.S. faces...
Direct-care workers constitute a low-wage, high-turnover workforce with low levels of health insuran...
This multi-method study examines the challenges and strategies of family day care providers, the lea...
The article provides a sociodemographic and socioeconomic portrait of individuals in the direct-care...
The dynamics of minimum wage increases vary across industries based on each industry’s specific stru...
Child care has become a central feature of family life in the United States today, as our children s...
More and more women with young or school-age children are now going out to work. If the father works...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2017-08Background: The rise of contingent work arrangem...
Purpose:A shift in the direct care workforce from aides trained to provide medical services to those...
This brief examines overtime hours and hourly wages among home care workers (home health aides and p...
Over one million women are employed in child care and are among the lowest wage workers in the US. T...
Child care workers’ wages have been an issue that has plagued the early childhood education field fo...
As the baby boom cohort nears retirement age, the question of how to provide necessary health care a...
This paper explores how the responsibilityof caring for children affects employment stability by stu...
Direct care workers, including nursing assistants, home health aides, and personal and home care aid...
Care work is essential to meet the basic needs and wellbeing of any society. However, the U.S. faces...
Direct-care workers constitute a low-wage, high-turnover workforce with low levels of health insuran...
This multi-method study examines the challenges and strategies of family day care providers, the lea...
The article provides a sociodemographic and socioeconomic portrait of individuals in the direct-care...
The dynamics of minimum wage increases vary across industries based on each industry’s specific stru...
Child care has become a central feature of family life in the United States today, as our children s...
More and more women with young or school-age children are now going out to work. If the father works...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2017-08Background: The rise of contingent work arrangem...
Purpose:A shift in the direct care workforce from aides trained to provide medical services to those...