[Review of the book Child care and corporate productivity: Resolving family/work conflicts]
Warlick, Jennifer L., 1987
Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 40(3), 457-458
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Child care and corporate productivity: Resolving family/work conflicts]
Moen, Phyllis, 1987
Administrative Science Quarterly, 32(3), 469-471
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Child care, family benefits, and working parents: A study in comparative policy]
Norgren, Jill, 1982
The American Political Science Review, 76(1), 169
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Child care, family benefits, and working parents: A study in comparative policy]
Adams, Carolyn T., 1982
Political Science Quarterly, 97(1), 170-171
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Child care, family benefits, and working parents: A study in comparative policy]
Schram, Rosalyn W., 1982
Journal of Marriage and the Family, 44(2), 500-501
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Child care, family benefits, and working parents: A study in comparative policy and of the book Research results of the National Day Care Study]
Hofferth, Sandra L., 1982
Contemporary Sociology, 11(1), 64-65
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Children's interests/mother's rights: The shaping of America's child care policy]
Gill, Brian P., 1999
American Journal of Education, 108(1), 68-71
A review of the history of child care policy in the United States in the twentieth century aimed at specialists in social welfare history and social policy
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Children's interests/mothers' rights: The shaping of America's child care policy]
Cochi Ficano, Carlena K., 2001
Contemporary Sociology, 30(2), 192-193
A review of a history of child care policy in the United States in the twentieth century, aimed at specialists in social welfare history and social policy
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Children's interests/mothers' rights: The shaping of America's child care policy]
Fuller, Bruce, 2000
Political Science Quarterly, 115(3), 477-479
A review of a history of child care policy in the United States in the twentieth century, aimed at specialists in social welfare history and social policy
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Children's interests/mothers' rights: The shaping of America's child care policy and of the book A mother's job: The history of day care, 1890-1960]
Lindenmeyer, Kriste, 1999
Education Review: A Journal of Book Reviews,
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Children's interests/mothers' rights: The shaping of America's child care policy and of the book A mother's job: The history of day care, 1890-1960]
Johansen, Shawn, 2003
Signs, 29(1), 262-264
The history of day care in the Untied States from 1890-1960
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Equal parenthood and social policy: A study of parental leave in Sweden]
Starrels, Marjorie E., 1993
American Journal of Sociology, 98(4), 946-948
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Family and work: Bridging the gap]
Rodman, Hyman, 1987
Contemporary Sociology, 16(6), 854
Book Reviews
[Review of the book In the business of child care: Employer initiatives and working women]
Ambert, Ann-Marie, 1989
Contemporary Sociology, 18(1), 64
Book Reviews
[Review of the book In the business of child care: Employer initiatives and working women]
Bailyn, Lotte, 1989
Administrative Science Quarterly, 34(3), 485-486
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Kids at work: The value of employer-sponsored on-site child care centers]
Ribar, David, April 2007
Economics of Education Review, 26(2), 257-258
A review of an examination of the joint decisions made by European parents about how to allocate time between paid employment and childcare to inform social policy
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Making care work: Employed mothers in the new childcare market]
Daly, Mary, 2003
Contemporary Sociology, 32(5), 569-570
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Making care work: Employed mothers in the new child care market]
Laughlin, Lynda L., 2004
Journal of Marriage and the Family, 66(2), 544-545
A review of an examination of the mechanisms that mothers use to select and maintain care for their children through interviews with 48 employed mothers from Memphis, Tennessee and Santa Cruz, California
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Making care work: Employed mothers in the new childcare market]
Scott, Phyllis F., 2004
AFFILIA, 19(2), 219-220
An examination of the mechanisms that mothers use to select and maintain care for their children through interviews with 48 employed mothers from Memphis, Tennessee and Santa Cruz, California
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Maternal employment and children's development: Longitudinal research]
John, Robert, 1989
Contemporary Sociology, 18(5), 815
Book Reviews
[Review of the book A mother's job: The history of day care, 1890-1960]
Goodwin, Joanne L., 2000
Children and Youth Services Review, 22(1), 75-81
Book Reviews
[Review of the book A mother's job: The history of day care, 1890-1960]
Nawrotzki, Kristen Dombkowski, 2000
History of Education Quarterly, 40(1), 88-90
Book Reviews
[Review of the book A mother's job: The history of day care, 1890-1960]
Ladd-Taylor, Molly, 2000
Journal of Social History, 34(2), 463-465
A review of an examination of the influence of welfare, maternal employment, and attitudes toward family values on the transformation of child care from 1890 to 1960, based on records from child care centers in Philadelphia
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Putting children first: How low-wage working mothers manage child care]
Rogers-Dillon, Robin, 2005
Contemporary Sociology, 34(6), 627-628
A review of a qualitative study of the child care arrangements of 42 low income single working mothers in New York City, based on interviews and observations collected over three years in the period following passage of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) OF 1996
Book Reviews
[Review of the book Putting children first: How low-wage working mothers manage child care]
Rank, Mark R., December 2006
Social Forces, 85(2), 1057-1058
A review of a qualitative study of the child care arrangements of 42 low income single working mothers in New York City, based on interviews and observations collected over three years in the period following passage of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) OF 1996
Book Reviews