This study compares two countries: Italy and Britain. It examines data from the BHPS and the ILFI up to 2005 and uses event history models to investigate changes across four successive birth cohorts in the effect of family responsibilities on women's transitions between paid market work and unpaid family-care work from the time women leave full-time education until they are in their forties. My findings show that in both countries women's attachment to paid work has increased and that education and/or class have marked and still mark the divide, as predicted by human capital theory. However, in line with culturalist and institutional approaches, it also emerges that the effect of motherhood is, ceteris paribus, stronger in a residualist-lib...
Economic models of household behavior typically yield the prediction that increases in schooling lev...
Italy and Spain are often labeled by the literature on comparative welfare as \u201cfamilistic\u201d...
In Italy in 2011, the employment rate for women between the ages of 25 and 54 was 64%, compared with...
This paper compares Italy and Great Britain and uses event history data and methods to investigate c...
Over the last fifty years women's employment has increased markedly throughout developed countries. ...
Examining board: Prof. Richard Breen (Nuffield College, Oxford, and foremr EUI, Supervisor) ; Prof.C...
Cross-sectional data on the role of education show that low-educated Italian women have one of the l...
Cross-sectional data on the role of education show that low-educated Italian women have one of the l...
This study, based on the data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, deals with...
The aim of this study is to estimate the effect of transition to parenthood on the partners’ divisio...
The paper analyzes the impact of life course events, and in particular of parenthood, on the paid an...
In this paper we compare Italy and Poland, two countries where the country-specific obstacles to wor...
Within pre-enlargement Europe, Italy records one of the widest employment rate gaps between highly a...
This paper compares Spanish and Italian welfare policies, evaluating their ability to better facilit...
The objective of the paper is to shed light on mechanisms behind Italian women’s satisfaction with t...
Economic models of household behavior typically yield the prediction that increases in schooling lev...
Italy and Spain are often labeled by the literature on comparative welfare as \u201cfamilistic\u201d...
In Italy in 2011, the employment rate for women between the ages of 25 and 54 was 64%, compared with...
This paper compares Italy and Great Britain and uses event history data and methods to investigate c...
Over the last fifty years women's employment has increased markedly throughout developed countries. ...
Examining board: Prof. Richard Breen (Nuffield College, Oxford, and foremr EUI, Supervisor) ; Prof.C...
Cross-sectional data on the role of education show that low-educated Italian women have one of the l...
Cross-sectional data on the role of education show that low-educated Italian women have one of the l...
This study, based on the data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, deals with...
The aim of this study is to estimate the effect of transition to parenthood on the partners’ divisio...
The paper analyzes the impact of life course events, and in particular of parenthood, on the paid an...
In this paper we compare Italy and Poland, two countries where the country-specific obstacles to wor...
Within pre-enlargement Europe, Italy records one of the widest employment rate gaps between highly a...
This paper compares Spanish and Italian welfare policies, evaluating their ability to better facilit...
The objective of the paper is to shed light on mechanisms behind Italian women’s satisfaction with t...
Economic models of household behavior typically yield the prediction that increases in schooling lev...
Italy and Spain are often labeled by the literature on comparative welfare as \u201cfamilistic\u201d...
In Italy in 2011, the employment rate for women between the ages of 25 and 54 was 64%, compared with...