Manufacturing Gender Inequality in the New Economy

Author:

Sutton April1,Bosky Amanda2,Muller Chandra2

Affiliation:

1. Cornell University

2. The University of Texas at Austin

Abstract

Tensions between the demands of the knowledge-based economy and remaining, blue-collar jobs underlie renewed debates about whether schools should emphasize career and technical training or college-preparatory curricula. We add a gendered lens to this issue, given the male-dominated nature of blue-collar jobs and women’s greater returns to college. Using the ELS:2002, this study exploits spatial variation in school curricula and jobs to investigate local dynamics that shape gender stratification. Results suggest a link between high school training and jobs in blue-collar communities that structures patterns of gender inequality into early adulthood. Although high school training in blue-collar communities reduced both men’s and women’s odds of four-year college enrollment, it had gender-divergent labor market consequences. Men in blue-collar communities took more blue-collar courses, had higher rates of blue-collar employment, and earned similar wages relative to otherwise comparable men from non-blue-collar communities. Women were less likely to work and to be employed in professional occupations, and they suffered severe wage penalties relative to their male peers and women from non-blue-collar communities. These relationships were due partly to high schools in blue-collar communities offering more blue-collar and fewer advanced college-preparatory courses. This curricular tradeoff may benefit men, but it appears to disadvantage women.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference82 articles.

1. Adelman Clifford. 2006. “The Toolbox Revisited: Paths to Degree Completion from High School through College.” Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education.

2. Stratification, School-Work Linkages and Vocational Education

3. Ideology and Curriculum

4. Schools and Communities: Ecological and Institutional Dimensions

5. Secondary Vocational Education and the Transition from School to Work

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