13 resultados para Social-spacial segregation

em BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça


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In den letzten Jahrzehnten haben sich Frauen in vielen arbeitsmarktrelevanten Bereichen wie Schulbildung, Berufsbildung und Studium den Männern angenähert. Trotz der damit einhergehenden steigenden Erwerbsbeteiligung von Frauen existieren nach wie vor grosse Differenzen in der Verantwortlichkeit für Haushaltsarbeit (Bundesamt für Statistik 1993: 31ff., Bundesamt für Statistik 1996b, Bundesamt für Statistik 1997: 12.ff, Strub et al. 2005). Auch US—amerikanische Studien zeigen etwa, dass verheiratete erwerbstätige Frauen ungefähr die doppelte Menge an Haushaltsarbeit verrichten wie Männer (Geerken und Gove 1983, Goldschneider und Waite 1991, Lennon und Rosenfield 1994, Pleck 1985, Ross 1987). Diese Verantwortlichkeit drückt sich nicht nur in der (Dis-)Kontinuität der Beschäftigung im Lebenslauf aus, sondern auch in der Berufswahl und in der Arbeitsorientierung (Polachek 1979, Becker 1985, Mincer 1985) und somit in den Löhnen. So sind in der Schweiz wie in den meisten anderen westlichen Industriegesellschaften die Berufe noch immer stark geschlechtsspezifisch segregiert (Müller et al. 1997) und die Frauenlöhne liegen knapp 20 Prozent unter dem Einkommensniveau der Männer (Bundesamt für Statistik 2000, 2003a, 2007; die Zahl bezieht sich auf den auf 40 Wochenstunden standardisierten Bruttolohn).

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Mayer H. Segmentation and segregation patterns of women-owned high-tech firms in four metropolitan regions in the United States, Regional Studies. The number of women starting and owning a business has increased dramatically and female entrepreneurs are entering non-traditional sectors such as high technology, construction and manufacturing. This paper investigates the trends in high-tech entrepreneurship by women in four US metropolitan regions (Silicon Valley, California; Boston, Massachusetts; Washington, DC; and Portland, Oregon). The research examines the sectoral and spatial segmentation patterns of women-owned high-tech firms. Although women are entering non-traditional sectors, the research finds that women entrepreneurs tend to own businesses in female-typed high-tech sectors. In established high-tech regions like Silicon Valley and Boston, male-typed and female-typed women-owned high-tech firms differ significantly in terms of sectoral and spatial segmentation regardless of firm age. While differences between male-typed and female-typed firms are not significant at the regional level for Washington, DC, the analysis shows significant intra-metropolitan differences for the female-typed high-tech firms. The paper concludes that sectoral and spatial segmentation are powerful dynamics that shape business ownership by women in high technology.

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How do institutional settings and their embedded policy principles affect gender-typed enrolment in educational programmes? Based on gender-sensitive theories on career choice, we hypothesised that gender segregation in education is higher with a wider range of offers of vocational programmes. By analysing youth survey and panel data, we tested this assumption for Germany, Norway and Canada, three countries whose educational systems represent a different mix of academic, vocational and universalistic education principles. We found that vocational programmes are considerably more gender-segregated than are academic (e.g. university) programmes. Men, more so than women, can avoid gender-typed programmes by passing on to a university education. This in turn means that as long as their secondary school achievement does not allow for a higher education career, they have a higher likelihood of being allocated to male-typed programmes in the vocational education and training (VET) system. In addition, social background and the age at which students have to choose educational offers impact on the transition to gendered educational programmes. Overall, gender segregation in education is highest in Germany and the lowest in Canada. We interpret the differences between these countries with respect to the constellations of educational principles and policies in the respective countries.

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This introductory chapter develops the overall research focus and the aim of the present special issue ‘Gender segregation in vocational education’. Against the backdrop of strong horizontal gender segregation in vocational education and training (VET), we ask how institutional arrangements affect gendered (self-)selection into VET, and to what extent the patterns of the latter vary by context and over time. In order to expand our knowledge about the impact of educational offers and policies on gendered educational pathways and gender segregation in the labour market, we have gathered comparative quantitative studies that analyse the relationship between national variations in the organization of VET and cross-national differences in educational and occupational gender segregation from an institutional perspective. Following a review of the core literature within the field of gender segregation in VET, this introduction presents a discussion of education system classifications and institutional level mechanisms based on the contributions made in this volume. We then discuss gendered educational choices at the individual level, with particular emphasis on variation across the life course. Finally, we conclude our introductory chapter by commenting on the main contributions of the volume as a whole, as well as addressing suggestions for further research.

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School-to-work transitions are embedded in the institutional structures of educational systems. In particular, vocational education has been linked to greater horizontal gender segregation in employment. Similarly, research on higher education has uncovered how stratification at the tertiary level can promote gender segregation in the labour market. This paper investigates how gender typical employment is conditioned by the institutional features of the educational system in Bulgaria. Despite the post-socialist transformations of Bulgaria's educational system and its labour market, horizontal gender segregation has remained rather moderate from an international perspective. We use data from a 2012 nationally representative survey. We find that the educational system shapes the gendered occupational trajectories for men but it does not hold the same explanatory power for women. Neither vocational nor higher education has a significant effect for women. In contrast, men with vocational education are more likely to work in male-typed occupations and, in line with the literature, higher education steers men toward gender mixed and a-typical occupations. Our study points to the importance of educational institutional factors in shaping gender (a)-typical career paths. The Bulgarian case, in particular, offers insights into the mechanisms that can potentially decrease horizontal gender segregation in the labour market.