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Titre : | Sex Segregation and Occupational Gender Inequality in the United States: Devaluation or Specialized Training? (1997) |
Auteurs : | Tony Tam |
Type de document : | Article : texte imprimé |
Dans : | American Journal of Sociology (vol. 102 - n° 6, May 1997) |
Article en page(s) : | pp. 1652-1692 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Catégories : |
Thésaurus CEREQ EXCLUSION PROFESSIONNELLE ; FEMME ; DIVISION SEXUELLE DU TRAVAIL ; EMPLOI DES FEMMES ; MARCHE DU TRAVAIL ; ETATS UNIS |
Résumé : | This article examines two hypotheses of the wage effects of occupational sex composition in the United States: the devaluation and the specialized human capital hypothesis. With data from an expanded version of the May 1988 Current Population Survey, this study finds that differences in the length of specialized training across occupations and industries, together with a few demographic and human capital attributes, are able to completely explain all of the sex composition effects among women and men, whites and blacks. The central results are difficult to reconcile with the devaluation hypothesis but are remarkably consistent with the specialized human capital hypothesis. |
Document Céreq : | Non |
En ligne : | https://doi.org/10.1086/231129 |