yes
The author of Little Men is Louisa May Alcott. She also wrote several other books, such as Little Women, Jo's Boys, and An Old-Fashioned Girl.
Where was Of Mice and Men set?Salinas, CaliforniaWhen?Around the 1930s. The novel was published in 1937, so it is like to have been set in the early/mid 1930s.
Nursing. Eighty-eight percent of workers in nursing in Great Britain are women.
The kind of jobs that women had before the Great Depression were limited to household chores. After the Great Depression, they were forced to find jobs that would generate income.
All the characters in the story (well, most of them) are American migrant workers in the 30s in the agricultural Salinas valley. they are also known as itinerant workers. they travel around finding poorly-paid jobs on ranches. they have no family. Steinbeck cared about the bad conditions they worked in and that is why he wrote it. the story follows two main characters, young men, called George and Lennie. the story is about their hardship and life on the ranch they are at.
Mac Nagel has a hot mom.
yellow, the simpsons lived a great live
Nadim Houry has written: 'Without protection' -- subject(s): Migrant labor, Abuse of, Women foreign workers, Employee rights, Household employees, Legal status, laws, Women household employees
ENICA stands for European Network of Immigrant and Migrant Women in Europe. It was an organization dedicated to advocating for the rights and well-being of immigrant and migrant women in Europe.
Women of the great depression were virtually invisible, they were expected to stay in the domestic sphere and the depression was seen as an all male issue. Work was very scarce for any one, man or woman and women were not expected to do anything. Women were looked down upon because they took work away from men. Many single women, out of desperation and starvation, sought out prostitution as a way to survive.
The Great Depression ended when the war began. The war demanded industrialization and military power so many men and women were given jobs. (Men- soldiers Women- Factories)
Amparita Sta. Maria has written: 'An analysis of the Philippine legal and policy frameworks for the protection of women migrant workers, particularly the domestic workers and entertainers, from vulnerability to HIV/AIDS' -- subject(s): AIDS (Disease), Dissertations, Domestics, Entertainers, Law and legislation, Legal status, laws, Migrant labor, University of Toronto, University of Toronto. Faculty of Law