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Labour market --- Social sciences --- Life span, Productive. --- Biographical methods. --- 303.686 --- #SBIB:303H30 --- -Life span, Productive --- Productive life span --- Work life --- Working life --- Age and employment --- Life cycle, Human --- Post-retirement employment --- Behavioral sciences --- Human sciences --- Sciences, Social --- Social science --- Social studies --- Civilization --- Oral history. Biografische methode --(sociaal onderzoek) --- Kwalitatieve methoden: algemeen --- Biographical methods --- 303.686 Oral history. Biografische methode --(sociaal onderzoek) --- Life span, Productive --- Biographical methods in the social sciences --- Biography in the social sciences --- Biography --- Social sciences - Biographical methods. --- SOCIOLOGIE --- METHODE DE COLLECTE DE L'INFORMATION --- VIE --- TRAVAIL
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The study brings together findings on a wide range of subjects, including childcare, caring for older relatives, employment and self-employment, flexible working, working unsociable hours and the ability to move with a job. It sets out how the majority of British families, occupying the broad middle ground of circumstances, are managing work and family life. Together with important insights into where both families and employers feel most pressure, it reflects on whether recent Government policy, aimed at helping working families, is moving in the right direction.
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A survey of British womens' attitudes to work and home in the 1980s and how they have changed since World War II. The relevant literature is reviewed and the result of recent surveys of womens' attitudes are cited.
Women --- Employment.
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Information about women's occupational mobility is required to resolve issues about women's role in class analysis, about theories of the operation of labour markets, and for understanding changes in the industrial structure. This book addresses the questions of how women move between jobs over their lifetime, how much downward occupational mobility they experience, and how many recover their status after downward moves. Results of exciting new data are integrated with current theoretical problems to make this book widely relevant to academics, policy makers and women's groups.
Women --- Employment.
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This book documents the early lives of almost 19,000 children born in the UK at the start of the 21st century, and their families. It is the first time that analysis of data from the hugely important Millennium Cohort Study, a longitudinal study following the progress of the children and their families, has been drawn together in a single volume. The unrivalled data is examined here to address important policy and scientific issues. The book is also the first in a series of publications that will report on the children's lives at different stages of their development. The fascinating range of findings presented here is strengthened by comparison with data on earlier generations. This has enabled the authors to assess the impact of a wide range of policies on the life courses of a new generation, including policies on child health, parenting, childcare and social exclusion. Babies of the new millennium (title tbc) is the product of an exciting collaboration from experts across a wide range of health and social science fields. The result is a unique and authoritative analysis of family life and early childhood in the UK that cuts across old disciplinary boundaries. It is essential reading for academics, students and researchers in the health and social sciences. It will also be a useful resource for policy makers and practitioners who are interested in childhood, child development, child poverty, child health, childcare and family policy.
Infants --- Parents --- Child development --- Child study --- Children --- Development, Child --- Developmental biology --- Families --- Babies --- Infancy --- Development --- Age group sociology --- Great Britain --- Parents. --- Infants. --- Child development. --- Great Britain.
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