Making It Work: Low-Wage Employment, Family Life, and Child Development
Editat de Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Thomas S. Weisner, Edward D. Loween Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 mar 2009
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 Work examines Milwaukee's New Hope program, an experiment testing the effectiveness of an anti-poverty initiative that provided health and child care subsidies, wage supplements, and other services to full-time low-wage workers. Employing parent surveys, teacher reports, child assessment measures, ethnographic studies, and state administrative records, Making It Work provides a detailed picture of how a mother's work trajectory affects her, her family, and her children's school performance, social behavior, and expectations for the future. Rashmita Mistry and Edward D. Lowe find that increases in a mother's income were linked to higher school performance in her children. Without large financial worries, mothers gained extra confidence in their ability to parent, which translated into better test scores and higher teacher appraisals for their children. JoAnn Hsueh finds that the children of women with erratic work schedules and non-standard hours—conditions endemic to the low-skilled labor market—exhibited higher levels of anxiety and depression. Conversely, Noemi Enchautegui-de-Jesus, Hirokazu Yoshikawa, and Vonnie McLoyd discover that better job quality predicted lower levels of acting-out and withdrawal among children. Perhaps most surprisingly, Anna Gassman-Pines, Hirokazu Yoshikawa, and Sandra Nay note that as wages for these workers rose, so did their marriage rates, suggesting that those worried about family values should also be concerned with alleviating poverty in America. It is too simplistic to say that parental work is either "good" or "bad" for children. Making It Work gives a nuanced view of how job quality, flexibility, and wages are of the utmost importance for the well-being of low-income parents and children.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780871549730
ISBN-10: 0871549735
Pagini: 441
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Russell Sage Foundation
Colecția Russell Sage Foundation
ISBN-10: 0871549735
Pagini: 441
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Russell Sage Foundation
Colecția Russell Sage Foundation
Notă biografică
HIROKAZU YOSHIKAWA is professor of education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. THOMAS S. WEISNER is professor of anthropology in the Semel Institute of the Department of Psychiatry, and in the Department of Anthropology at the University of California, Los Angeles. EDWARD D. LOWE is associate professor of Anthropology at Soka University of America.
Cuprins
Contents 1 Introduction: Raising Children Where Work Has Disappeared Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Thomas S. Weisner, and Edward D. Lowe Part I. Experiences of Low-Wage Work 2 Pathways Through Low-Wage Work Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Edward D. Lowe, Thomas S. Weisner,JoAnn Hsueh, Noemi Enchautegui-de-Jesus, Anna Gassman-Pines, Erin B. Godfrey, Eboni Howard, Rashmita Mistry, Amanda L. Roy 3 Pathways Through Low-Wage Work: Do They Matter for Children's Development? Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Edward D. Lowe, Johannes M. Bos, Thomas S. Weisner, Valentina Nikulina, & JoAnn Hsueh 4 How Mothers in New Hope Experienced Job Quality Noemi Enchautegui-de-Jesus, Hirokazu Yoshikawa, and Vonnie C. McLoyd 5 Mothers at Work in a 24-7 Economy: Exploring Implications for Family and Child Well-Being JoAnn Hsueh 6 Discrimination in the Low-Wage Workplace: The Unspoken Barrier to Employment Amanda L. Roy, Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Sandra Nay Part II. Work and Family 7 "I Want What Everybody Wants": Goals, Values, and Work in the Lives of New Hope Families Thomas S. Weisner, Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Edward D. Lowe, and Faye Carter 8 What Earnings and Income Buy. The "Basics" Plus "A Little Extra": Implications for Family and Child Well-Being Rashmita S. Mistry, Edward D. Lowe 9 Can Money Buy You Love? Dynamic Employment Characteristics, the New Hope Program and Entry into Marriage Anna Gassman-Pines, Hirokazu Yoshikawa & Sandra Nay Part III. Supports for Work 10 Child Care and Low-Wage Employment Edward D. Lowe and Thomas S. Weisner 11 Informal Social Support, Well-Being, and Employment Pathways of Low-Income Mothers Eboni Howard 12 Do Formal Work Support Services Work? Experiences of the New Hope and Wisconsin Works (W-2) Programs Erin B. Godfrey and Hirokazu Yoshikawa Conclusion 13 Summary and Policy Implications: Improving the World of Work for Low-Income Parents and Their Children Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Anna Gassman-Pines, Thomas S. Weisner, and Edward D. Lowe 14 Epilogue Johannes M. Bos