Working women in France, nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Where, when, and which women were in work at marriage?

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Publication date

2014-01-01

Authors

Zijdeman, RichardISNI 000000010711579X
Van Leeuwen, Marco H.D.ISNI 0000000121352409
Rébaudo, Danièle
Pélissier, Jean Pierre

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Abstract

We look at women's labour force participation for the whole of France in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. We study to what extent young women were working at the time of their marriage, in which occupations, and how differences in labour force participation might be explained. Using a sample of 53,451 marriage records from the TRA project, we identify regional and temporal differences in rates of female labour force participation and in types of work in France between 1860 and 1986.We observe rather stable levels of female labour force participation between 1860 and 1950 of about 60 per cent, but higher levels in the second half of the twentieth century. Over time, women started to work across virtually all occupational sectors. Regional differences declined over time but continued to exist in the late twentieth century. We formulate a set of hypotheses to explain which women worked, taking into account their resources, as well as their expectations, in a male-breadwinner-dominated society. The results of our hierarchical logistic analysis indicate that women with fewer parental resources were more likely to work.

Keywords

France, labour force participation, labour market, marriage, migration, occupations, women, SDG 5 - Gender Equality

Citation

Zijdeman, R L, van Leeuwen, M H D, Rébaudo, D & Pélissier, J P 2014, 'Working women in France, nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Where, when, and which women were in work at marriage?', The History of the Family, vol. 19, no. 4, pp. 537-563. https://doi.org/10.1080/1081602X.2014.967266