Description

Book Synopsis

One of the most dramatic economic changes of the past century has been the increase in married women's work outside the home. This volume examines the nature of married women's participation in the economies of three East Asian countriesJapan, Taiwan, and South Korea. In addition to asking what is similar or different about women's economic participation in this region of the world compared to Western societies, the book also asks how women's work patterns vary across the three countries.

The essays focus on key theoretical questions for the study of women's labor and, more broadly, economic gender inequality. How do we assess the value of work available to married women in different countries and cultural contexts? What forces promote or hinder women's work outside the home throughout marriage and childrearing? Does wage employment necessarily benefit women more than the informal sector (e.g., family-run businesses)? Is full-time work always more desirable than part-time work

Trade Review
"[Women's Working Lives in East Asia] provides much needed description and analyses around. . . . [themes] which have not previously been discusses in English-language scholarship."—Canadian Journal of Sociology Online
"The book is unusual for edited volumes in that the individual chapters come together in a unified, consistent argument. This book is a 'must read' and highly recommended for scholars of women's studies, economic development, and East Asian studies. It belongs in every research library. . . . "—Canadian Journal of Sociology Online
"This valuable book is a must read for academics and students at all levels. Its readable, clear, and comprehensive presentation and rich original data should make it accessible to all levels."—The Journal of Asian Studies
"I recommend Women's Working Lives in East Asia to anyone who wants to understand women's working lives outside the industrialized West."—American Journal of Sociology
" . . . This book is a welcome addition to our knowledge of women's participation in three important economies of East Asia."—Journal of Japanese Studies

Table of Contents
Tables and figures Acknowledgments 1. Married women's labor in East Asian economies Mary C. Brinton 2. Married women's employment in rapidly industrializing societies: South Korea and Taiwan Mary C. Brinton, Yean-Ju Lee, and William L. Parish 3. Family demands, gender attitudes, and married women's labor force participation: comparing Japan and Taiwan Wei-hsin Yu 4. Women, work, and marriage in three east Asian labor markets: the cases of Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea Yean-Ju Lee and Shuichi Hirata 5. Women's education and the labor market in Japan and South Korea Mary C. Brinton and Sunhwa Lee 6. Women's solidarity: company policies and Japanese office ladies Yuko Ogasawara 7. Mothers as the best teachers: Japanese motherhood and early childhood education Keiko Hirao 8. Women's education, work, and marriage in South Korea Sunhwa Lee 9. Taking informality into account: women's work in the formal and informal sectors in Taiwan Wei-hsin Yu 10. The 'boss's wife' and Taiwanese small familt business Yu-Hsia Lu 11. Daughters, parents, and globalization: the case of Taiwan Nidhi Mehrotra and William L. Parish Notes References Index.

Womens Working Lives in East Asia

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    A Paperback / softback by Mary C. Brinton

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      Publisher: Stanford University Press
      Publication Date: 01/10/2002
      ISBN13: 9780804743549, 978-0804743549
      ISBN10: 0804743541

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      One of the most dramatic economic changes of the past century has been the increase in married women's work outside the home. This volume examines the nature of married women's participation in the economies of three East Asian countriesJapan, Taiwan, and South Korea. In addition to asking what is similar or different about women's economic participation in this region of the world compared to Western societies, the book also asks how women's work patterns vary across the three countries.

      The essays focus on key theoretical questions for the study of women's labor and, more broadly, economic gender inequality. How do we assess the value of work available to married women in different countries and cultural contexts? What forces promote or hinder women's work outside the home throughout marriage and childrearing? Does wage employment necessarily benefit women more than the informal sector (e.g., family-run businesses)? Is full-time work always more desirable than part-time work

      Trade Review
      "[Women's Working Lives in East Asia] provides much needed description and analyses around. . . . [themes] which have not previously been discusses in English-language scholarship."—Canadian Journal of Sociology Online
      "The book is unusual for edited volumes in that the individual chapters come together in a unified, consistent argument. This book is a 'must read' and highly recommended for scholars of women's studies, economic development, and East Asian studies. It belongs in every research library. . . . "—Canadian Journal of Sociology Online
      "This valuable book is a must read for academics and students at all levels. Its readable, clear, and comprehensive presentation and rich original data should make it accessible to all levels."—The Journal of Asian Studies
      "I recommend Women's Working Lives in East Asia to anyone who wants to understand women's working lives outside the industrialized West."—American Journal of Sociology
      " . . . This book is a welcome addition to our knowledge of women's participation in three important economies of East Asia."—Journal of Japanese Studies

      Table of Contents
      Tables and figures Acknowledgments 1. Married women's labor in East Asian economies Mary C. Brinton 2. Married women's employment in rapidly industrializing societies: South Korea and Taiwan Mary C. Brinton, Yean-Ju Lee, and William L. Parish 3. Family demands, gender attitudes, and married women's labor force participation: comparing Japan and Taiwan Wei-hsin Yu 4. Women, work, and marriage in three east Asian labor markets: the cases of Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea Yean-Ju Lee and Shuichi Hirata 5. Women's education and the labor market in Japan and South Korea Mary C. Brinton and Sunhwa Lee 6. Women's solidarity: company policies and Japanese office ladies Yuko Ogasawara 7. Mothers as the best teachers: Japanese motherhood and early childhood education Keiko Hirao 8. Women's education, work, and marriage in South Korea Sunhwa Lee 9. Taking informality into account: women's work in the formal and informal sectors in Taiwan Wei-hsin Yu 10. The 'boss's wife' and Taiwanese small familt business Yu-Hsia Lu 11. Daughters, parents, and globalization: the case of Taiwan Nidhi Mehrotra and William L. Parish Notes References Index.

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