although most "consequences" of women working in world war two created a positive outcome, most believe that it wasn't the attitude or actions of women that had any negative effect, but that it was the attitude of others especially men, thinking that women were less than capable of performing the task at hand.
Rosie the Riveter was what women who worked in factories were called.
working in factories.
Women had hard lives. They ran the family, made the clothes, and cooked the meals.
Not especially the working conditions were good and clean
Yes, many women face bladder problems during pregnancy, childbirth and the months that follow because your bladder is just below your uterus, which is expanding to hold your growing baby.
Women who worked faced numerous problems during the Great Depression including low wages, harsh working conditions and not being treated equally as men. They also were given menial jobs.
Yes.
Rosie the Riveter was what women who worked in factories were called.
Rosie the riveter- represented working women in factories that took over men's jobs.
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?
Seeing as during the time, women were striving to get better conditions because the men thought of them as the people who would stay at home and clean, look after the children, etc. The men didn't call these working women during the war a special type of name due to the sexism. They were just referred to as "Working women" or "Working-class women"
Working on assembly lines
working in factories.
the information
Women had hard lives. They ran the family, made the clothes, and cooked the meals.
women who works for his family and she has to do work for his family and face lot of problems , she face all difficulties just to help her family is called working women.
180,000 between 1941 and 1945