Analyzing Canadian women working after childbirth as lifecourse transition
Auteurs: Stéphanie Gaudet, Martin J. Cooke, et Joanna Jacob
Aperçu
Résumé (français)
Veuillez noter que les résumés n'apparaissent que dans la langue de la publication et peuvent ne pas avoir de traduction.
Résumé (anglais)
This research focussed on Canadian mothers who had a first child between 1970 and 1999, and the probability of these mothers working shortly after childbearing. Authors Stéphanie Gaudet, Martin Cooke and Joanna Jacob studied the change and underlying dynamics with two main questions. first, what are the characteristics that affect Canadian women’s employment? And how have women’s employment transitions after the birth of a first child changed over time? The investigators probed the effects of socio-economic characteristics on labor force withdrawal using the 2001 General Social Survey, Cycle 15 on Family History. Employment transition was viewed through a type of lifecourse analysis for six cohorts of mothers over the 30-year span. Gaudet, Cooke and Jacob attempted to understand underlying inter-cohort differences through individual characteristics such as level of education, age at childbearing, employment before childbearing, and spousal income. The researchers concluded that since the mid-1980s, mothers with low educational attainment are largely excluded from the labor market during the two years following the birth of their first child.
Détails
Type | Rapport à un groupe politique |
---|---|
Auteur | Stéphanie Gaudet, Martin J. Cooke, et Joanna Jacob |
Année de pulication | 2012 |
Titre | Analyzing Canadian women working after childbirth as lifecourse transition |
Nom du Journal | Research Brief |
Numéro | 10 |
Ville | London, ON |
Établissement | Population Change and Lifecourse Strategic Knowledge Cluster |
Langue de publication | Anglais |
- Stéphanie Gaudet
- Stéphanie Gaudet, Martin J. Cooke, et Joanna Jacob
- Analyzing Canadian women working after childbirth as lifecourse transition
- 2012
- Population Change and Lifecourse Strategic Knowledge Cluster
- 10
- London, ON