While sociologists have shown how employers contribute to occupational segregation along lines of race, gender, and nativity, little attention has been paid to unpackingwhy employers engage in those practices. We take on this gap through a case study of hired labor relations on Wisconsin dairy farms, which have become segregated along lines of nativity and race in recent years. We ask how these workplaces have become segregated, what employers ’ roles in this process have been, and why, in particular, employers have engaged in practices that contribute to workplace inequal-ities. We find that employers engage in practices that leave immigrant workers clustered in the low-end jobs for a com-plex array of reasons: to maintain profits within a...
Immigrants are often concentrated in particular, often low-waged, segments of the labour market and ...
The significant growth in employers’ use of labor intermediaries—that is, third parties that stand b...
Despite public perception to the contrary, segregated workplaces exist in greater number today than ...
This article explores the relationship between labor market discrimination, stereotypes and employer...
In the past few decades, scholarship on immigrant workers has produced two contrasting images that r...
The rapidly growing Latino immigrant population raises questions about how the “brown collar” worker...
We examine the relationship between migration and occupational segregation for black and white job c...
Using a large sample of employees-within-workplaces, the author investigates the relative role of ra...
Peters E, Melzer SM. Immigrant-Native Wage Gaps at Work: How the Public and Private Sectors Shape Re...
Scholars of employment segregation now recognize that gender, race, and class processes are mutually...
[Excerpt] Of the multiple explanations for the post-World War II immigration experiences of those ad...
Much research has examined the impact of occupational segregation on the gendergap in wages. This re...
The introduction present key research questions addressed by the Special Issue: What is the characte...
Despite extensive and ongoing immigration enforcement efforts, undocumented workers continue to have...
This Article integrates social science theory about immigrant incorporation and administrative agen...
Immigrants are often concentrated in particular, often low-waged, segments of the labour market and ...
The significant growth in employers’ use of labor intermediaries—that is, third parties that stand b...
Despite public perception to the contrary, segregated workplaces exist in greater number today than ...
This article explores the relationship between labor market discrimination, stereotypes and employer...
In the past few decades, scholarship on immigrant workers has produced two contrasting images that r...
The rapidly growing Latino immigrant population raises questions about how the “brown collar” worker...
We examine the relationship between migration and occupational segregation for black and white job c...
Using a large sample of employees-within-workplaces, the author investigates the relative role of ra...
Peters E, Melzer SM. Immigrant-Native Wage Gaps at Work: How the Public and Private Sectors Shape Re...
Scholars of employment segregation now recognize that gender, race, and class processes are mutually...
[Excerpt] Of the multiple explanations for the post-World War II immigration experiences of those ad...
Much research has examined the impact of occupational segregation on the gendergap in wages. This re...
The introduction present key research questions addressed by the Special Issue: What is the characte...
Despite extensive and ongoing immigration enforcement efforts, undocumented workers continue to have...
This Article integrates social science theory about immigrant incorporation and administrative agen...
Immigrants are often concentrated in particular, often low-waged, segments of the labour market and ...
The significant growth in employers’ use of labor intermediaries—that is, third parties that stand b...
Despite public perception to the contrary, segregated workplaces exist in greater number today than ...