I am not sure what you mean about an informal sector. Working women do their best to meet all demands of family and jobs.
Higginbotham and Weber discovered that women from the working class backgrounds were encouraged to get an education.
Yes, they did. They were slaves and considered property so they were put to work at various jobs. Slave women would often have their babies while working in the fields and then keep working.
768 Women working as police officers in the Detroit Police Department.
Like their formal counterpart, informal controls exist to reward or punish people for acceptable / unacceptable behaviour (what sociologists call deviance). Informal controls cover a vast array of possible sanctions and tend to differ from individual to individual, group to group and society to society. Informal controls apply to informal norms of behaviour and they include things like ridicule, sarcasm, disapproving looks, punching people in the face and so forth.For example, at a Women's Institute gathering a disapproving look may be enough to tell you that people think it is not appropriate to flirt with the vicar. Amongst members of a criminal gang, however, it is unlikely that a disapproving look would be used as a means of informal social control should you tell them you intend to inform on their activities to the police.
it refers to women who are mothers and who work outside of the home for income in addition they perform at home raising their children.
Reema Nanavaty has written: 'From local to global and informal to formal' -- subject(s): Employment, Informal sector (Economics), Women
Mondira Dutta has written: 'Capturing women's work' -- subject(s): Women employees, Economic conditions, Employees, Informal sector (Economics), Sex discrimination in employment
Ramani Gunatilaka has written: 'Real wage trends and labour market integration in the informal sector' -- subject(s): Wages, Women agricultural laborers, Unskilled labor, Labor market, Informal sector (Economics) 'Farming, industry, or migration?' -- subject(s): Home economics, Statistics, Poverty, Income
The answer depends on what the number of working women is being compared to:working women to working men?working women to non-working women?Also, by "working women" do you mean only paid work?
S. N. Tripathy has written: 'Informal women labour in India' -- subject(s): Employment, Women, Informal sector (Economics) 'Impact of road transport in tribal India' -- subject(s): Roads, Social conditions, Economic conditions, Transportation 'Bonded labour in India' -- subject(s): Peonage, States, Agricultural laborers 'Migrant child labour in India' -- subject(s): Child labor 'Contractual labour in agricultural sector' -- subject(s): Agricultural laborers, History, Peonage, Economic conditions
Irene Tom has written: 'Women in unorganised sector' -- subject(s): Employees, Silk industry, Women silk industry workers 'Women in Organised Sector'
COLIN C. WILLIAMS has written: 'RECONCEPTUALIZING WOMEN'S PAID INFORMAL WORK : SOME LESSONS FROM LOWER-INCOME URBAN NEIGHBOURHOODS' 'CASH-IN-HAND WORK: THE UNDERGROUND SECTOR AND THE HIDDEN ECONOMY OF FAVOURS'
Florence E. Babb has written: 'After Revolution' 'The tourism encounter' -- subject(s): Collective memory, Culture and tourism, Politics and government, Tourism 'Between field and cooking pot' -- subject(s): Employment, Informal sector (Economics), Peddlers and peddling, Women, Women merchants
Show pictures of women wearing hoop skirts.
The answer will depend on what exactly you are trying to measure:working women in the US as a percentage of women in the US,women working in the US as a percentage of women working in the world,working women in the US as a percentage of worker in the US.There are probably other possibilities.
Working Women's Forum was created in 1978.
The reasons for growth in service economy are; Increase in affluence. more laiesire, higer percentage of women working in labour, greater complexity of labor, increase in products.