This study describes (1) the association between husbands’ and wives’ employment statuses and occupations in the Netherlands, (2) establishes possible trends in the association, and (3) explores to what extent the association can be attributed to educational homogamy. We use 12 waves of the Dutch Labor Force Survey (1994–2006), and use log-linear models to analyze the associations between the labor market positions of spouses. Overall, we find positive associations, implying that favorable positions are accumulated within households. For couples with children, the association between spouses’ employment status is negative, which means that they divide paid labor. Over birth cohorts, the association between spouses’ employment statuses becom...
In this article, the authors address the extent to which full-time working couples in the Netherland...
Contains fulltext : 28208.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Effects of occup...
Abstract. It is well-known that married and cohabiting women differ in labour supply. But we know ve...
This study describes (1) the association between husbands’ and wives’ employment statuses and occupa...
Contains fulltext : 141308.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Using data from...
Contains fulltext : 140826.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Economic theo...
This study describes and explains the gap in occupational status between partnered homosexual and he...
This study investigates the role of the partner in career mobility in The Netherlands from the 1940s...
In this article, the authors address the extent to which full-time working couples in the Netherland...
Background: Fertility research often uses data from women only. This can bias the results if the eff...
textabstractAbstract Using data from the Netherlands Kinship Panel Study, this paper compares the pa...
Contains fulltext : 28411.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In this study we...
Using data from the Eurobarometers, the association between the occupations of spouses is studied fo...
Item does not contain fulltextIn the context of population aging and growing numbers of older worker...
Data for 1977 and 1995/96 are used to study (changes in) the effects of the partners’ resources on ...
In this article, the authors address the extent to which full-time working couples in the Netherland...
Contains fulltext : 28208.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Effects of occup...
Abstract. It is well-known that married and cohabiting women differ in labour supply. But we know ve...
This study describes (1) the association between husbands’ and wives’ employment statuses and occupa...
Contains fulltext : 141308.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Using data from...
Contains fulltext : 140826.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Economic theo...
This study describes and explains the gap in occupational status between partnered homosexual and he...
This study investigates the role of the partner in career mobility in The Netherlands from the 1940s...
In this article, the authors address the extent to which full-time working couples in the Netherland...
Background: Fertility research often uses data from women only. This can bias the results if the eff...
textabstractAbstract Using data from the Netherlands Kinship Panel Study, this paper compares the pa...
Contains fulltext : 28411.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In this study we...
Using data from the Eurobarometers, the association between the occupations of spouses is studied fo...
Item does not contain fulltextIn the context of population aging and growing numbers of older worker...
Data for 1977 and 1995/96 are used to study (changes in) the effects of the partners’ resources on ...
In this article, the authors address the extent to which full-time working couples in the Netherland...
Contains fulltext : 28208.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Effects of occup...
Abstract. It is well-known that married and cohabiting women differ in labour supply. But we know ve...