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Making It Work Low-Wage Employment, Family Life, and Child Development

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ISBN-10: 0871549735

ISBN-13: 9780871549730

Edition: 2006

Authors: Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Thomas S. Weisner, Edward D. Lowe

List price: $29.95
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Description:

Low-skilled women in the 1990s took widely different paths in trying to support their children. Some held good jobs with growth potential, some cycled in and out of low-paying jobs, some worked part time, and others stayed out of the labor force entirely. Scholars have closely analyzed the economic consequences of these varied trajectories, but little research has focused on the consequences of a mother s career path on her children s development.Making It Work, edited by Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Thomas Weisner, and Edward Lowe, looks past the economic statistics to illustrate how different employment trajectories affect the social and emotional lives of poor women and their children. Making It…    
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Book details

List price: $29.95
Copyright year: 2006
Publisher: Russell Sage Foundation
Publication date: 3/5/2009
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 441
Size: 6.00" wide x 9.00" long x 1.10" tall
Weight: 1.430
Language: English

John Whelen is a tudor and research assistant in the faculty of education at Monash University, Australia.

Contributorsp. ix
Acknowledgmentsp. xi
Introduction: Raising Children Where Work Has Disappearedp. 1
Experiences of Low-Wage Workp. 25
Pathways Through Low-Wage Workp. 27
Do Pathways Through Low-Wage Work Matter for Children's Development?p. 54
Job Quality Among Low-Income Mothers: Experiences and Associations with Children's Developmentp. 75
Mothers at Work in a 24/7 Economy: Exploring Implications for Family and Child Well-Beingp. 97
Discrimination in the Low-Wage Workplace: The Unspoken Barrier to Employmentp. 124
Work and Familyp. 145
"I Want What Everybody Wants": Goals, Values, and Work in the Lives of New Hope Familiesp. 147
What Earnings and Income Buy-The "Basics" Plus "a Little Extra": Implications for Family and Child Well-Beingp. 173
Can Money Buy You Love? Dynamic Employment Characteristics, the New Hope Project, and Entry into Marriagep. 206
Supports For Workp. 233
Child Care and Low-Wage Employmentp. 235
The Informal Social Support, Well-Being, and Employment Pathways of Low-Income Mothersp. 256
Do Formal Work Support Services Work? Experiences of the New Hope Project and the Wisconsin Works Programp. 273
Conclusionp. 305
Summary and Policy Implications: Improving the World of Work for Low-Income Parents and Their Childrenp. 307
Epiloguep. 336
Methodological Appendixp. 345
Notesp. 357
Referencesp. 388
Indexp. 413
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