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Black Women in the Workplace: Impacts of Structural Change in the Economy (Contributions in Women's Studies)
 
 
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Black Women in the Workplace: Impacts of Structural Change in the Economy (Contributions in Women's Studies) [Hardcover]

Bette Woody (Author)

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Book Description

May 30, 1992 0313255911 978-0313255915
In the recent debate over the growing poverty among blacks, attention has increasingly focused on the role of women heading households as a contributor to poverty. Throughout the debate, however, surprisingly little attention has been paid to the workplace. This study examines how structural change in the U.S. economy and particularly the rise of new service sectors have reshaped the work content, opportunity, and wages of one labor group--black women. Evidence for the study comes from two sources--statistical data from U.S. Census data on employment, particularly the Current Population Survey file, and interviews with black women in several representative industries surveyed in the book. The initial chapters in the book explore the contradiction between evolving trends in the economy, including the decline in manufacturing, and a government policy that continues to rely on the marketplace to provide jobs. Chapters 4-6 explore, in more detail, the outcomes of the shift from manufacturing to services. These chapters examine how sectors individually shape job markets and may in the process provide mobility and wage gains or intensify the ghettoization of women and the stratification of women by race. The final chapters examine case histories of several black women and look at the future of black women in the emerging workplace of the twenty-first century.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Woody's examination of African-American women has implications not just for black labor but for labor in general. This book will be appreciated by scholars and researchers seeking solutions to gender and racial inequality and by students of U.S. public policy.”–American Journal of Sociology

About the Author

BETTE WOODY is Associate Professor in the College of Public and Community Service, General Center, at the University of Massachusetts-Boston, She is also a research associate and project director at the Center for Research on Women, Wellesley College.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In the recent debate over the growing poverty among blacks, attention has increasingly focused on the role of women heading households as a contributor to, if not a cause of, poverty. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
traditional labor theory, health insurance trends, domestic household work, black women workers, women heading households, work subculture, nondurable manufacturing, work force participation, occupational mix, job expansion, median annual earnings
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New York, Monthly Labor Review, The Economics of Labor Markets, World War, Phyllis Wallace, Bennett Harrison, Black White, Bette Woody, Julianne Malveaux, Workplace Table, Department of Labor, Brookings Institution, Census of the Population, Segmented Work, Oxford University Press, Slipping Through the Cracks, Wellesley College, Basic Books, Bureau of Labor Statistics, New Brunswick, Transaction Books, David Gordon, Dryden Press, National Labor Relations Board
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