@JoyaMisra @JMF_NCFR @equitablegrowth @SinikkaElliott @M_Reid_PhD @asr_journal @SashaKillewald & @xiaolinzhuo document U.S. mothers’ employment patterns across the first 18 years of maternity. This approach enables a distinction between nonemployment (
@dhsandler Just in case you hadn’t seen this: https://t.co/OTxYbR51yO
RT @ASA_Family: In a new paper in Demography, @SashaKillewald and @xiaolinzhuo use sequence analysis to study maternal employment as a long…
RT @ASA_Family: In a new paper in Demography, @SashaKillewald and @xiaolinzhuo use sequence analysis to study maternal employment as a long…
RT @ASA_Family: In a new paper in Demography, @SashaKillewald and @xiaolinzhuo use sequence analysis to study maternal employment as a long…
RT @ASA_Family: In a new paper in Demography, @SashaKillewald and @xiaolinzhuo use sequence analysis to study maternal employment as a long…
RT @hamandcheese: Interesting new study identifying distinct clusters of women in terms of how their employment responds to child birth. H…
Interesting complement to some of the patterns @WendyRWang and I highlighted here: https://t.co/adqyrCTaLf
Interesting new study identifying distinct clusters of women in terms of how their employment responds to child birth. Having traditional notions of gender roles is a highly significant predictor of not re-entering the labor force after first birth. ht
RT @ASA_Family: In a new paper in Demography, @SashaKillewald and @xiaolinzhuo use sequence analysis to study maternal employment as a long…
In a new paper in Demography, @SashaKillewald and @xiaolinzhuo use sequence analysis to study maternal employment as a long-term pattern, finding five common patterns of employment. https://t.co/jPH404vulc https://t.co/V8e5Th3QLO
Friday Five: U.S. Mothers' Long-Term Employment Trends https://t.co/zTuLbvU8ox
RT @NLSat50plus: What are the long-term employment patterns of U.S. mothers? Killewald & Zhuo @Harvard use #NLSY79 data in their article: h…