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Author: Larrick, Don
Resulting in 2 citations.
1. Macke, Anne Statham
Hudis, Paula M.
Larrick, Don
Sex-Role Attitudes and Employment Among Women: Dynamic Models of Continuity and Change
In: Women's Changing Roles at Home and on the Job: National Commission for Manpower Policy, Special Report No: 26. Washington DC: U.S. GPO, 1978
Cohort(s): Mature Women, Young Women
Publisher: U.S. Government Printing Office
Keyword(s): Employment; Husbands, Influence; Sex Roles; Teenagers; Vocational Education; Work Attitudes; Work History

The authors explore the hypothesis that prior sex-role attitudes among women influence subsequent labor force behavior, which, in turn, affects later sex-role attitudes. They find that recent declines in sex-role traditionality among American women are likely to accelerate the desire for employment among whites, but that among blacks, attitudinal changes appear not to affect the future employment of current adult cohorts. For black adolescents entering the labor force, however, early market work will be important predictors of their future desire for work. Husbands' attitudes toward women's involvement in the labor market, particularly among whites, were also significant. Based on these and other findings, the authors present five public policy recommendations.
Bibliography Citation
Macke, Anne Statham, Paula M. Hudis and Don Larrick. "Sex-Role Attitudes and Employment Among Women: Dynamic Models of Continuity and Change" In: Women's Changing Roles at Home and on the Job: National Commission for Manpower Policy, Special Report No: 26. Washington DC: U.S. GPO, 1978
2. Macke, Anne Statham
Hudis, Paula M.
Larrick, Don
Sex-Role Attitudes and Employment Among Women: A Dynamic Model of Change and Continuity
Report, Columbus OH: Center for Human Resource Research, The Ohio State University, October 1979
Cohort(s): Mature Women, Young Women
Publisher: Center for Human Resource Research
Keyword(s): Employment; Gender Attitudes/Roles; Husbands, Influence; Labor Force Participation; Sex Roles; Work Attitudes

Our analyses demonstrate a small but significant effect of nontraditional attitudes on white wives' extent of employment experience and a substantially larger effect of market participation on later attitudes.
Bibliography Citation
Macke, Anne Statham, Paula M. Hudis and Don Larrick. "Sex-Role Attitudes and Employment Among Women: A Dynamic Model of Change and Continuity." Report, Columbus OH: Center for Human Resource Research, The Ohio State University, October 1979.