Race,Affirmative Action,and Women's Employment in US Highway Construction |
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Authors: | Vivian Price |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Economics , Université du Québec à Montréal , 315, rue Ste-Catherine Est, Montréal, Québec, H2X 3X2, Canada jdelaat@worldbank.org |
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Abstract: | This paper analyzes employment hours, supplemented by interview data, from large highway construction sites in Boston, Los Angeles, and Oakland in the 1980s and 1990s. This study suggests that affirmative action positively affects the employment of women in construction and where there is more pressure, there are strongr results. Second, white women and women of color tend to work in trades that reflect the existing racial hierarchies among men. Therefore race as well as gender should be reflected in the design and measurement of the impacts of employment programs. Community organizing, advocacy for women and men of color, judicial oversight and positive efforts by unions and employers are still critical to bridging the gap between policy intentions and outcomes. |
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Keywords: | Affirmative Action Nontraditional Labor Unions Occupational Segregation By Race And Gender Construction Worker Judicial Oversight |
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