Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyse how and whether young women’s strong and early preference for having children relates to the degree of occupational segregation of the careers they envisage for themselves and the careers they actually enter by the time they reach age 23. Design/methodology/approach Drawing on theories predicting that young women act to replicate gendered social stereotypes in their career choice and to anticipate careers they perceive to be reconcilable with future motherhood, the authors conduct quantitative analyses using panel data from the Transitions from Education to Employment Survey, a longitudinal survey of young people in Switzerland. OLS regression analyses how expressing a strong desire to ...
The study examines supply-side mechanisms of occupational gender segregation, analysing work values ...
Career development is a lifelong process that starts in infancy and is shaped by a number of differe...
Young people’s gendered occupational choices are partly responsible for sex-segregation in the labou...
To better understand the gap between women’s childbearing aspirations and actual levels of childbear...
A questionnaire survey was conducted to investigate the factors that shape high-achieving young wome...
This thesis advances the understanding of gender differences in occupational preferences and job val...
Falling birth rates and an increase of women, especially mothers, in the paid workforce have elicite...
Women’s occupation choice has been incompletely modeled in the past, but this paper brings together ...
Although there are well-established relationships between women’s higher education, labour fo...
We examine the argument hat predominantly female occupations attract women because they are relative...
Although there are well-established relationships between women's higher education, labour force par...
In recent studies on the association between education and fertility, increased attention has been p...
Women have made considerable gains in educational attainment and increased their labour market parti...
Changing gender relations has meant that young people increasingly expect to share paid work and car...
Purpose: After many years of equal opportunities legislation, motherhood still limits womens' career...
The study examines supply-side mechanisms of occupational gender segregation, analysing work values ...
Career development is a lifelong process that starts in infancy and is shaped by a number of differe...
Young people’s gendered occupational choices are partly responsible for sex-segregation in the labou...
To better understand the gap between women’s childbearing aspirations and actual levels of childbear...
A questionnaire survey was conducted to investigate the factors that shape high-achieving young wome...
This thesis advances the understanding of gender differences in occupational preferences and job val...
Falling birth rates and an increase of women, especially mothers, in the paid workforce have elicite...
Women’s occupation choice has been incompletely modeled in the past, but this paper brings together ...
Although there are well-established relationships between women’s higher education, labour fo...
We examine the argument hat predominantly female occupations attract women because they are relative...
Although there are well-established relationships between women's higher education, labour force par...
In recent studies on the association between education and fertility, increased attention has been p...
Women have made considerable gains in educational attainment and increased their labour market parti...
Changing gender relations has meant that young people increasingly expect to share paid work and car...
Purpose: After many years of equal opportunities legislation, motherhood still limits womens' career...
The study examines supply-side mechanisms of occupational gender segregation, analysing work values ...
Career development is a lifelong process that starts in infancy and is shaped by a number of differe...
Young people’s gendered occupational choices are partly responsible for sex-segregation in the labou...