no...false
they didnt
Women and those minorities that couldn't fight had to hold down the fort at home. They were called to work in manufacturing and farming and often, were thrown into jobs they were unfamiliar with.
The biggest difficulty minorities and women faced in the workforce during World War 2 was being thrust into unfamiliar jobs
The number of women in the work force increased because of the absence of men while they were in the war. and then with women in the work force they stayed there and they have increased work force size since then even with the men home.
work = force * distance
by going to your school office or the Texas work force number?
Diversity of the work force can be a superficial description that means employing a token number of minorities or it can mean a truly diverse work force of a mix of minorities that reflects the community of the workplace; male, female and a few in between; young, old, and ages in between; well educated and under educated talented, experienced people; and people with a variety of handicapping conditions. Real diversity is a workforce made up of people representative of the community at large.
In both the allied force nations and in the axis force nations women went to work in the war manufacturing plants. In most of the allied nations not only did women join that work force but the minorities and natives (such as Aborigines in Australia and Blacks, Mexicans and Chinese) joined the war effort in the plants, shipyards, and local government positions (like transit services).After the war these people groups learned they could join the work force in many ways and places. Businesses began hiring the women and minorities whereas in the past they had not.In later decades women demanded equal rights in the workforce. In the US the blacks gained civil rights and demanded equal rights in the workforce and universities too.In Japan the women and girls were finally allowed to be educated and become and important part of the workforce.
FDR disproves the idea that the declining value in hard work has caused the Great Depression.
I usually start with the definition of work: Work = force * distance so... Force = work / distance Distance = work / force So, no. You had it backwards.
The rate was only 11.9% in 2010. union rates have been declining for the past 50 years, except for government workers which President Kennedy signed a bill allowing government unions in 1961.
Work is energy, and work done by a force equals force times distance moved IN THE DIRECTION OF THE FORCE