Comparable Worth: Is It a Worthy Policy?
β Scribed by Elaine Sorensen
- Publisher
- Princeton University Press
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 181
- Series
- Princeton Legacy Library, 5268
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
For decades women working as nurses, librarians, and secretaries have argued that they are paid less than men in jobs requiring comparable skill and effort. By the late 1980s, the notion of "comparable worth" had become a familiar one, and comparable worth initiatives were being developed to counteract the persistent disparities between male and female pay. In a comprehensive assessment of this policy, Elaine Sorensen lays out the various approaches states have taken, identifying the most and least successful among them.
The author attributes part of the gender pay gap to economic discrimination and suggests theoretical models that best explain this discrimination. She examines the usefulness of comparable worth policies as a means of reducing male/female wage disparities. Minnesota's policies are examined in detail as an example of promising efforts in this regard. Sorensen ends by examining comparable worth's likely future fate in Congress and the courts.
β¦ Table of Contents
9780691601571_FChigh
032634_Sorensen_Web
Contents
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<div><div><I>When we feel that we arenβt enough, or that we arenβt good enough,<BR> we also fear that weβll never have enough.</I></div><BR> Money. We love it. We hate it. If we donβt have enough, weβre struggling to get more. If we do have it, weβre fighting to hold on to it. Why does money have to
"A former United States Secretary of Education and a liberal arts graduate expose the broken promise of higher education."