Fr. 54.50

Black Women in the U.s. Economy - The Hardest Working Woman

English · Paperback / Softback

Will be released 31.01.2019

Description

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Black women in the United States have often been the subject of negative stereotypes, which have distorted perceptions of their unique work history and the challenges that they have faced in providing for their families. Black Women in the U.S. Economy: The Hardest Working Woman challenges the popular rhetoric about black women by presenting an empirical analysis of their labor market experiences and the critical role that black women play in providing for and sustaining their families and communities.
The book explores the multiple identities, roles, and experiences of black women in the U.S. economy, addressing issues including their contribution to the social economy, how they have been affected by U.S economic restructuring, and the impact of increasing economic inequality on the wellbeing of black women and children.


List of contents

Introduction: Structural and Political Transformations
Section 1: Black Women in the Market Economy


  1. Education and Schooling

  2. Occupations and Labor Market Experience

  3. Earnings, Wealth, and Mobility
  4. Section 2: Social Relations

  5. Marriage, Cohabitation, and Divorce

  6. Fertility, Parenting and Caregiving

  7. New Arrangements

  8. Social Economy
  9. Section 3: Politics, Public Policy and its Effects

  10. Immigration

  11. Health and the Affordable Care Act

  12. Child Welfare and Social Insurance

  13. Labor Market Policies

  14. Incarceration and Criminalization
Conclusion

About the author










Nina Banks is Associate Professor of Economics at Bucknell University, USA.
Rhonda V. Sharpe is Visiting Associate Professor of Economics at Bucknell University, USA.
Cecilia A. Conrad is Managing Director of the MacArthur Fellows Program. Before joining the foundation in January 2013, she had a distinguished career as both a professor and an administrator at Pomona College, USA.



Summary

Black women in the United States have often been the subject of negative stereotypes, which have distorted perceptions of their unique work history and the challenges that they have faced in providing for their families. Black Women in the U.S. Economy: The Hardest Working Woman challenges the popular rhetoric about black women by presenting an empirical analysis of their labor market experiences and the critical role that black women play in providing for and sustaining their families and communities.
The authors use a Black Feminist framework along with applied microeconomics and econometrics in order to understand the multiple identities, roles, and experiences of black women in the U.S. economy. The book’s multi-dimensional analysis covers issues including black women’s contribution to the social economy, how economic restructuring in the U.S. has impacted on black women, and how declining wages since the 1970s have led to economic inequality and the impact that this has had on the wellbeing of black women and children. All chapters situate their analysis of the economic status of black women within the context of market forces, social relations among counter-groups, and political economy.
This groundbreaking study will be essential reading for all those with an interest in Economics, Women’s Studies, Africana Studies and Sociology.

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