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The Third Career: Revisiting the Home vs. Work Choice in Middle Age

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Third Career: Revisiting the Home vs. Work Choice in Middle Age

Contributors:

By (Author) Milica Z. Bookman

ISBN:

9780275968113

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

30th March 2000

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Labour / income economics
Sociology: work and labour

Dewey:

331.44

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

240

Description

Bookman takes a detailed look at the goals and motivations of high-income middle-aged women who want to enter the labor force after having spent most of their adult lives tending their homes, raising children, and volunteering in the community. The book examines the supply of their labor, their incentives, their motivations, and the fears they face as they evaluate their future options. Bookman also discusses the demand for their skills by reviewing the opportunities available to them in the labor market and detailing what they can realistically aspire to and what obstacles they are likely to encounter. By describing the changes in the workplace that are likely to affect middle-aged women, the book offers a compelling labor market study with regard to this unique group of workers. Bookman makes four major contributions to the literature on women's studies issues in her book. First, she focuses on middle age by addressing the needs and concerns of this booming age bracket. Second, she introduces the concept of the Third Career, in which women want to be employed but not in a demanding or stressful career. Instead, they prefer part-time work or work with greater flexibility, and they are willing to sacrifice income in order to achieve these objectives. Third, the book uses the concepts of shadow skills and human capital to describe the demand for middle-aged female labor. Finally, the book analyzes the possible economic losses and gains to society when middle-aged women enter the labor force, concluding that the net contribution to the economy is positive.

Reviews

The argument is easy to follow, firmly rooted in an image of economic woman as a rational being....Recommended for general readers.-Choice
The strengths of the book are many. It is well written, clean, and flows well. It moves easily back and forth between theory, research, and case studies.-Family Relations
"The argument is easy to follow, firmly rooted in an image of economic woman as a rational being....Recommended for general readers."-Choice
"The strengths of the book are many. It is well written, clean, and flows well. It moves easily back and forth between theory, research, and case studies."-Family Relations

Author Bio

MILICA Z. BOOKMAN is professor of economics at St. Joseph's University in Philadelphia. She was educated at Brown University, the London School of Economics, and Temple University. She is the author of five books on economics as well as numerous articles.

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