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Gender and Precarious Work in the United States: Evidence from the Contingent Work Supplement 1995–2017
29
Citations
15
References
2020
Year
EducationContingent Work SupplementUnited StatesWorkplace StudySocial SciencesGender DisparityGender IdentityLabour StudyGender StudiesPrecarious WorkEconomic InequalityNeoliberal PhaseSocial InequalityFeminist EconomicsSocial ClassLabor Force TrendLabor EconomicsHousehold LaborWorkforce DevelopmentSociologyGender EconomicsGender Divide
A central element of the neoliberal phase of capitalism is the flexibilization of labor and the consequent prevalence of precarious work. Here, we discuss flexibilization, develop a definition and measure of precarious work using the Contingent Work Supplement to the Current Population Survey, and examine the gender composition of precarious work in the United States. We find that gender and racial hierarchies persist in precarious jobs over the 1995–2017 period. Women—and women with children in particular—are over-represented in precarious jobs compared to men. Our findings call for a consideration of the impact of the changing nature of work on different groups of workers, and a renewed role for policy to ensure equitable terms of social reproduction.
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