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The health of Canadian women in the workforce : a comparison between homemaker women, workforce women and workforce men based on the 1979 Canada health surveyCaruth, Fran January 1987 (has links)
In the past twenty-five years there has been a marked increase in the number of women in the paid labour force, especially among women with young children. Time studies have shown that when a woman has a young family plus a position in the paid labour force, she works a very long day and has little time for recreational or leisure pursuits.
This thesis therefore poses the following questions:
1. Do women who participate in the paid labour force report poorer health status than their counterparts who are homemakers?
2. Do women who participate in the paid labour force exhibit lifestyle patterns significantly different from their homemaker counterparts?
3. Do women in the paid labour force exhibit health care utilization patterns significantly different from their homemaker counterparts?
and 4. Do women's lifestyles, reported health status and health care
utilization patterns differ from those of their male counterparts in the paid labour force?
Data from the 1978-79 Canada Health Survey (C.H.S.), which had asked a wide cross-section of Canadians about their lifestyle, health status and use of the health care system, were used to explore these questions. A model was then developed for this study which linked health risk behaviours, health status and health care related behaviours, and which used the variables available in the C.H.S. data base. Multiple Classification Analyses were carried out to determine the best predictors of women's health risk behaviours, health status and health care related behaviours. The three study groups were then standardized using the top two predictors and the rates of the various states and behaviours were compared.
First, in the prediction of women's health risk behaviours, the demographic variables included in the model were not effective as only 3-4% of the variance in the scores could be explained. Secondly, in the prediction of health status scores, the composite health risk scores developed for each subject plus the demographic variables were able to explain 4 - 11% of the variation. Thirdly, in the prediction of women's health care related behaviours the composite health risk scores, the health status scores and the demographic variables were together able to explain 14 - 27% of the variance.
When the standardized rates for high health risk behaviours were compared, there were significant differences between the three groups but no group was consistently better or worse than any other. The men's group however, consistently reported better health and less use of the health care system. The women's groups reported similar health states but women in the paid labour force reported a higher use of medications and fewer days in hospital.
The C.H.S. was designed to address issues which affect the whole population. The questions therefore, were not always sufficiently specific to describe the special circumstances of women, especially for example in their childbearing and nurturing years. The rapidly changing social and economic circumstances of women and their families, as women enter the paid labour force, plus the need for more information on their health risk behaviours - what these behaviours are, and what predisposes women to engage in them - point to the need for more research focused specifically on this section of the population. / Medicine, Faculty of / Population and Public Health (SPPH), School of / Graduate
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The organizational implications of employment behavior following maternity leaveAltman, Arliss Marilyn January 1989 (has links)
Although participation of Canadian women in the labour force has significantly increased in the past decade, and in turn the number of maternity leave claims, information is limited on actual employment behavior following maternity leave and the factors which influence this behavior. The purpose of this study was to examine the employment behavior following maternity leave for 313 women of varying occupations from a large metropolitan hospital in order to: isolate significant variables which influence this behavior, examine return rates and employment patterns for women who return to work, identify the major problems women experience upon their return to work, examine the experience of women with the current maternity leave legislation, obtain their opinions on whether flexible work policies encourage staff retention and finally, to develop a set of recommendations to assist organizations in achieving staff retention following maternity leave.
Data respecting the positions of the women, their personal characteristics and their employment behavior following their leave were collected from personnel records. The dependent variables for the study were three distinct types of employment behavior: employees who terminated following their maternity leave, employees who terminated following their return to work and employees who remained employed at the hospital. There were nine independent variables which were tested as potential employment behavior influences namely level of education, age,
organizational tenure, employment status, union/management affiliation, salary level, occupational level, number of previous maternity leaves and organizational division. The Chi Square test of Independence was run for six variables and the One Way Analysis of Variance for three variables. In-depth structured interviews were conducted with five women selected randomly from the sample in order to identify the major problems they encountered in returning to work as well as to obtain their opinions on the current maternity leave legislation. They were also questioned regarding the effectiveness of flexible work policies.
Two of the variables tested were found to be significant employment behavior influences: type of union and organizational tenure. It was also found that the least flexible union had the highest termination rate. Although the majority of women returned to work and remained employed at the hospital, a high percentage transferred to part-time and casual employment. The interviews revealed that the major concerns women had were the need for more flexible work policies, an increase in part-time opportunities and child-care concerns including the need for on-site day care. All of the women interviewed felt that 18 weeks was an inadequate length of time for a maternity leave and some of the women wanted maternity benefits for their entire leave and not just 15 weeks.
It was concluded from the results of the study that flexible work policies and organizational support systems encourage staff
retention following maternity leave, it was recommended that in order for organizations to achieve staff retention following maternity leave that they must introduce flexible work policies and a specific staff retention plan. / Business, Sauder School of / Graduate
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The women-in-development efficiency approach : a case study of programming income generation in a Chinese villageTyler, Diane 11 1900 (has links)
In the 1970s, international development planners began to recognize women's
important roles in their communities. A variety of approaches to include women have
since evolved, and their merits are debated. They have been described in the literature
as "welfare," "Women-in-Development" (WID), and "Gender and Development"
(GAD). The welfare approach focuses on basic needs while strengthening women's
homemaker and reproductive roles. The WID approach is based on increasing women's
incomes as a means toward empowerment. The Gender and Development (GAD)
addresses systemic gender discrimination. There is need for research in development
planning. Development programs track results during the project, but seldom look at
long term impacts and sustainability.
This thesis reports the results of research on a 1991 WID efficiency approach,
women's income generation project in Shaanxi Province, China, by examining the
impact seven years later. My methodology involved interviews with twenty-one
women project participants, eight husbands, village leaders and informal lunch-hour
focus group discussions with villagers. The project involved transition from grain to
orchards. The orchards dramatically increased women's incomes and improved the
quality of village life. The women took full control of orchard management, pushing
men out of the orchards saying that they were "incapable" of the monotonous orchard
tasks. Most husbands found off-farm jobs, diversifying household incomes. Women
gained marketing skills, self-confidence, and financial independence, but remained
vulnerable as primary producers to income fluctuations. Most women stayed outside
village politics, and traditional gender role socialization was maintained. The project
fulfilled women's needs and interests, however, long term results for women are mixed.
The Shaanxi field project was one of sixty-six field projects under the Canada-
China Women-in-Development Project (1990-1995) implemented in partnership by the
Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and the All-China Women's
Federation. The project had two components: poverty reduction and institutional
strengthening of the Women's Federation. I was the Canadian co-manager of the
Canada-China WID Project, and have since completed more than thirty contracts
(fifteen projects) plus a two-year contract as co-manager of the Canada-China Women's
Law Project (one year of which was full-time in China). My research is intended to
assist and improve my future work in the development field, and to inform those
interested in women's development program planning and gender equality policy.
Good planning was key to the strength of the Canada-China WID Project.
Partners shared a common goal. CIDA's efficiency approach supported the Women's
Federation policy to bring women into production as a means of achieving equality.
Participatory planning and decision-making involved Federation project officers across
China. Delegation in management and clear, commonly set guidelines increased
partners' involvement and accountability. Power in planning gradually, and tacitly,
transferred to the Women's Federation as they assumed ownership and responsibility
for results.
Strong donor/recipient partnership and participatory planning processes
strengthen potential for sustainable results. Suggestions to improve women's
development planning include: increasing gender awareness, strengthening women's
interest and capacity in political participation, developing risk mitigation strategies to
lessen income insecurity, blending WID/GAD projects, and further research on project
impacts. / Education, Faculty of / Educational Studies (EDST), Department of / Graduate
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Gender, class and community: the history of Sne-nay-muxw women’s employmentLittlefield, Loraine 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis documents the employment history of Sne-nay-muxw women. The Sne
nay-muxw, a Coast Salish peoples, live on the southeast coast ofVancouver Island close
to the city ofNanaimo. Nanaimo was established by the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1852
as coal mining town. Coal dominated the economy until the early 20th century when
forestry related production became important. Today a service economy has eclipsed both
the primary and secondary industries. Within these economies a distinct gender, race and
class segregation structured Sne-nay-muxw women’s employment opportunities. This
study examines the nature of this segregation, the Sne-nay-muxw domestic economy and
the gender ideology that promoted both women’s inclusion and exclusion in. wage labour.
A central question posed in this thesis is why Sne-nay-muxw women today perceive their
traditional roles to be within the home despite their historical participation in the labour
force.
Feminist anthropology provides the theoretical and methodological approach used for
this study. It is accepted that women’s experiences in the labour force are different not
only from men but also from other women based upon relational inequalities ofrace and
class. Historical data was collected from a variety of sources; published and unpublished
government reports, missionary accounts, letters and journals. Nineteen women and eight
men were interviewed in the community for both historic and contemporary accounts of
employment experiences.
History reveals that during the mining economy Sne-nay-muxw women were excluded
from working in the mines and limited to employment as domestic servants. The introduction of Chinese labour, decreasing coal demands and increased technology forced
many women to migrate with their families to the canneries on the Fraser river and the hop
fields in Washington state. In the forestry related production economy, Sne-nay-muxw
women’s opportunities were limited despite the expansion of employment for women in
the service sector. State policies and inferior education were significant factors in this
exclusion. At this time Sne-nay-muxw women continued to migrate with their families to
the fish camps on Rivers Inlet and the berry fields in Washington state. In the last two
decades the service economy has dominated in Nanaimo. Sne-nay-muxw women have
found increasing job opportunities on and off reserve in administration, management and
professional service delivery programs. While this employment is part of the wider trend
for women in the service economy, Sne-nay-muxw women’s opportunities remain
segregated by gender, race and class.
Women’s participation in the labour force is shown to be linked to the organization of
their domestic economy. Before 1920 this economy incorporated both subsistence
production and farming with seasonal wage labour. After this time the Sne-nay-muxw
became increasingly dependent upon wage labour. However, extended family and kinship
networks have remained important for support and cooperation. This form ofhousehold
organization did not constrain women’s participation in the labour force. Today extended
families remain the central organizing principle in Sne-nay-muxw lives. Sne-nay-muxw
women’s identity and opportunities for education and employment remain linked to their
membership in these families.
Shifts in women’s participation in the labour force is shown to be accompanied by
acceptance of a domestic ideology. During the mining economy when women actively sought wage labour, they acquired domestic skills needed for wage labour but did not
accept an ideology that promoted their dependency upon men. Historical evidence
indicates that they retained a significant degree of autonomy in their lives. With men’s
increased security of employment in the forestry economy, the idealized role ofwomen as
housewives was promoted. Families that were able to realize women’s exclusion from the
labour force gained status and prestige in the community. Finally, in the service economy,
the Sne-nay-muxw gender ideology includes women’s participation in the labour force to
occupations linked to their domestic and nurturing roles. / Arts, Faculty of / Sociology, Department of / Graduate
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A model of the joint determination of labor force participation and fertility decisions of married womenMazany, Robin Leigh January 1982 (has links)
In this dissertation, we examine the economic determinants of the labor force participation and fertility behavior of married women using a simultaneous equations model. The model takes into account both the truncation of hours of work at zero and the dichotomous nature of the decision of whether to have a child.
We estimate the model using maximum likelihood methods. The data used are from the Michigan Panel Survey of Income Dynamics. We find the results from the simultaneous model to be quite different from the results obtained using single equation methods. Our results thus suggest a simultaneous framework is the most appropriate for the examination of labor force participation and fertility decisions.
We run simulations on two different tax policies which might be expected to affect both the labor supply decision and the fertility decision. We find the tax policies do not have a large effect on either decision, although the effect on hours worked is stronger than the effect on fertility. We also find the effects of the policies to be stronger if there are already two children in the family. / Arts, Faculty of / Vancouver School of Economics / Graduate
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The Influence of Perceived Career Barriers on College Women's Career PlanningRaiff, Gretchen Wade 12 1900 (has links)
Research has indicated that balancing work and family is on the minds of college-age women long before they are married. At the same time, women continue to choose occupations that do not fully utilize their abilities and often fail to follow their original career goals. The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of perceived career barriers and supports on young women's career planning. Utilizing Social Cognitive Career Theory (SCCT) and recent literature as a basis, this study conceptualized career goals using the two constructs career salience and career aspirations. Based on information garnered in this student's thesis and on studies examining pathways in the SCCT model, the current study used a hierarchical regression model and hypothesized that barriers related to work and family conflict and sex discrimination would have the most impact on the career aspirations and career salience of young women. Career supports were hypothesized to add significantly to the prediction of these variables, and coping self-efficacy for these types of barriers were hypothesized to depend on the level of these types of barriers perceived and the interaction effect was in turn expected to add significantly to the prediction of career aspirations and career salience. None of the hypotheses were supported in predicting career salience. Career aspirations were found to be predicted by barriers other than those hypothesized, career supports were found to add significant variance, and coping self-efficacy for work and family conflict was found to have a unique, unpredicted relationship with career aspirations. Implications of the findings are discussed as are suggestions for directions of new research utilizing SCCT.
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Relationship of marital status, employment status, and psychosocial factors to depression in women...McEachren, Lyla 01 January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Demographic, psychosocial, and situational correlates of married employed females' alcohol useMay, Rosemary 01 January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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Multiple role women: A comparison of college students and employeesMounsey, Elizabeth Colonna 01 January 1992 (has links)
Multiple roles -- Role strain -- Status inconsistency -- Social support -- Self efficacy -- Role quality.
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The effects of exposure to female role models on female career self-efficacy for perceived male-dominated occupationsHines, Beverly Jean 01 January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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