Women in the trades. 1985.

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Women in the trades. 1985.

This study was designed to explore the experiences of women employed in nontraditional blue collar jobs and to identify some common concerns of these women. Twenty-five women employed in the trades in Washington state were participants in this study. The women worked in various industries including aerospace, shipbuilding, maritime, and forestry. No two women were in the same trade. The sample included white, African-American, Asian-American, Chicano, and Native American women. They ranged in age from 24 to 69 years old. They varied according to marital status, parental status, and sexual preference. Participants were selected through word-of-mouth contact. During one 125-item, open-ended interview, the researcher examined issues central to the lives of women in nontraditional work. Issues investigated included the women's backgrounds and reasons for entering a trade; their experiences on the job and reaction to their minority status; sex discrimination; occupational health and safety; union involvement; and the ways that nontraditional work affected their family and their self-perceptions. The Murray Center has acquired all the typed interview transcripts.

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Radcliffe College. Henry A. Murray Research Center

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The Henry A. Murray Research Center of Radcliffe College, (formerly the Radcliffe Data Resource and Research Center, 1976-1979) was founded by Radcliffe College in 1976 as a national repository for social science data on the changing life experiences of American women, and to sponsor scholarly research on the impact of social change on women's lives. From the description of Records of the Henry A. Murray Research Center, 1976-1988 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id...

Schroedel, Jean Reith

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