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Do Unions Help or Hinder Women in Training? Apprenticeship Programs in the United States
27
Citations
15
References
2000
Year
Labor RelationLabor Market ParticipationEducationHuman Resource ManagementUnited StatesJoint SponsorshipIndustrial RelationGender DisparityWorkforce EducationGender StudiesCollective BargainingApprenticeship ProgramsSocial InequalityEmploymentLabor RelationsLabor Market OutcomeFeminist TheoryLabor EconomicsWorkforce DevelopmentSociologyBusinessLower Attrition RatesLabor UnionsGender DivideLabor LawAttrition Probabilities
Trade unions are frequently criticized for excluding women from skilled crafts by denying them training. This article examines this argument by eestimatin the retention and attrition probabilities of men and women in the joint union‐management and the unilateral employer‐sponsored apprenticeship programs. While men, on average, have higher retention and lower attrition rates than women, joint sponsorship raises women's graduation probability above (and lowers their quit probability below) those of men or women apprentices in unilateral programs.
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