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Glass, Jennifer – 1996
According to a recent study of how women manage maternity in the workplace, more than 70% of pregnant employees were still employed at the same job 6 months after childbirth (compared to 80% of young women who had not been pregnant). A study of 324 randomly selected employed women in the Midwest yielded similar results. Six months after giving…
Descriptors: Birth, Career Development, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
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Holtzman, Mellisa; Glass, Jennifer – Work and Occupations: An International Sociological Journal, 1999
Pregnant women (n=227) interviewed before and six and 12 months after childbirth reported declines in job satisfaction following birth. The following factors positively or negatively affected satisfaction: length of leave, ability to work at home, 30 to 35-hour work week, evening/rotating shifts, supervisor support, and child-care environment. (SK)
Descriptors: Birth, Employed Women, Family Work Relationship, Job Satisfaction
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Glass, Jennifer; Nath, Leda E. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
This study explores the effect of religious conservatism on the labor force behavior of women who marry or add a new child to their household, using the 1988-1993 National Survey of Families and Households (N = 3,494). We model changes in labor supply, occupation, and wages as a function of either conservative denominational membership or…
Descriptors: Birth, Females, Marriage, Labor Force