This study presents two estimates of a motherhood penalty for young female attorneys. In the first phase, I utilize three different models in a regression analysis to examine which theoretical mechanisms might explain the presence of a motherhood penalty. In the second phase of this study, I employ a two-stage counterfactual approach utilizing a doubly robust weighted regression. I control for likelihood of selection into treatment with variables representing the most common theoretical mechanisms leading to the motherhood wage penalty, then utilize that selection likelihood to weight a second regression. I find that while there is a small motherhood penalty in the first phase multiple regression, there does not appear to be a motherhood pe...
Women in the United States have made monumental strides in recent decades to increase their particip...
In 2019, half of the Juris Doctorate degrees were conferred to women, yet 34.8% of the American Bar ...
It is increasingly common in the United States for women who have children to do so while being empl...
The motherhood wage penalty is a crucial topic in explaining the gender wage gap. The current litera...
It is well known that women face unique, sex-based challenges in the workforce. Several scholarly te...
The lower pay earned by mothers has been documented in previous research, but the causes of this pen...
Using a dataset of survey responses from University of Michigan Law School graduates from the classe...
The gender wage gap has been researched extensively; the argument around the wage gap has evolved fr...
This Article examines the effects of motherhood on the careers of women lawyers and the efficacy of ...
This article asks how cultural frameworks of status influence the evaluation of performance includin...
The aim of this thesis is to unveil what constitutes the Motherhood Wage Penalty, a phenomenon that ...
In this data snapshot, author Rebecca Glauber discusses her research on the motherhood wage penalty....
This dissertation explores the connections between changing family structures and economic inequalit...
Women experience significant penalties in wages and other labor market outcomes when they have child...
This article explores the wage gap between mothers and non-mothers, which is called the motherhood w...
Women in the United States have made monumental strides in recent decades to increase their particip...
In 2019, half of the Juris Doctorate degrees were conferred to women, yet 34.8% of the American Bar ...
It is increasingly common in the United States for women who have children to do so while being empl...
The motherhood wage penalty is a crucial topic in explaining the gender wage gap. The current litera...
It is well known that women face unique, sex-based challenges in the workforce. Several scholarly te...
The lower pay earned by mothers has been documented in previous research, but the causes of this pen...
Using a dataset of survey responses from University of Michigan Law School graduates from the classe...
The gender wage gap has been researched extensively; the argument around the wage gap has evolved fr...
This Article examines the effects of motherhood on the careers of women lawyers and the efficacy of ...
This article asks how cultural frameworks of status influence the evaluation of performance includin...
The aim of this thesis is to unveil what constitutes the Motherhood Wage Penalty, a phenomenon that ...
In this data snapshot, author Rebecca Glauber discusses her research on the motherhood wage penalty....
This dissertation explores the connections between changing family structures and economic inequalit...
Women experience significant penalties in wages and other labor market outcomes when they have child...
This article explores the wage gap between mothers and non-mothers, which is called the motherhood w...
Women in the United States have made monumental strides in recent decades to increase their particip...
In 2019, half of the Juris Doctorate degrees were conferred to women, yet 34.8% of the American Bar ...
It is increasingly common in the United States for women who have children to do so while being empl...