BellerAndrea H.1982. “Occupational Segregation by Sex: Determinants and Changes.”The Journal of Human Resources17(Summer 1982).
2.
BergmanBarbara. 1983. “Women's Plight Bad and Getting Worse.”Challenge26(March-April 1983): 22–26.
3.
BurnhamLinda. 1985. “Has Poverty Been Feminized in America?”The Black Scholar (March-April): 14–24.
4.
EhrenreichBarbara, and PivenFrances Fox. 1984. “The Feminization of Poverty,”IrvingHowe, Ed., Alternatives: Proposals for America from the Democratic Left.New York: Pantheon Books.
5.
HarrisonBennett. 1978. “Labor Market Structure and the Relationship Between Work and Welfare.” Working Paper, M.I.T. and Harvard University.
6.
HuntElgin F., and ColanderDavid C.1987. Social Science: An Introduction to the Study of Society.New York, New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
7.
JohnsonBeverly L., and WaldmanElizabeth. 1983. “Most Women Who Maintain Families Receive Poor Labor Market Returns.”Monthly Labor Review106(December): 30–34.
8.
KingAllan G.1978. “Labor Market Racial Discrimination Against Black Women.”The Review of Black Political Economy8. (Summer): 332–338.
9.
MillerDorothy C.1983. “AFDC Mapping a Strategy for Tomorrow.”Social Service Review (December): 599–612.
10.
O'HareWilliam P.1985. “Poverty in America: Trends and New Patterns.”Population Reference Bureau Bulletin40(June): 1–44.
11.
OppenheimerV.1970. The Female Labor Force in the United States: Demographic and Economic Factors Governing Its Growth and Changing Composition.Berkeley, California.Institute of International Studies, University of California.
12.
PearceDiane. 1978. “The Feminization of Poverty: Women, Work and Welfare.”Urban and Social Change Review (February): 28–36.
13.
StallardKarin, and EhrenreichBarbara. 1983. Poverty in the American Dreams: Women and Children First (Pamphlet No. 1). Institute for New Communications: South End Press.
14.
ThorntonArland, and FreedmanDeborah. 1983. “The Changing American Family.”Population Reference Bureau Bulletin33(October): 1–44.
15.
U.S. Bureau of the Census.1983. District of Columbia Detailed Population Characteristics: 1980. Pt. 10, Ch.D., Tables 222, 238, 245.
16.
U.S. Bureau of the Census.1983. District of Columbia General Social and Economic Characteristics: 1980. Pt. 10, Ch.C., Tables 134, 135.
17.
U.S. Bureau of the Census.1981. Money Income and Poverty Status of Families and Persons in the United States. Current Population Reports, Series p-60, No. 36.
18.
U.S. Bureau of the Census.1984. United States Census of Population; 1980. U.S. Summary, Sect. A, Ch.D., Table 29C.
19.
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. 1983. Disadvantaged Women and Their Children: A Growing Crisis.Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
20.
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. 1982. Unemployment and Underemployment Among Blacks, Hispanics and Women.Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
21.
CongressU.S.1982. Joint Economic Committee. Economic Status of Women. Hearings Before the Joint Economic Committee. 97th Congress, 2nd Session.
22.
CongressU.S.1982. Joint Economic Committee. Working Mothers are Preserving Family Living Standards. A staff study prepared for the use of The Joint Economic Committee of Congress (May).
23.
U.S. Department of Labor.1981. Women's Bureau. Employers and Child Care: Establishing Services Through the Workplace (Pamphlet 23). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
24.
U.S. Department of Labor.1981. Women's Bureau. Time of Change: 1983 Handbook on Women Workers (Bulletin 298). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
25.
WallacePhyllis. 1980. Black Women in the Labor Force.Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
26.
Wider Opportunities for Women, Incorporated. 1981. “The Feminization of Poverty.” Issue Brief, Washington, D.C. (mimeographed).