"Women and Work: The Psychological Effects of Occupational Conditions"
by Miller, Joanne; Schooler, Carmi; Kohn, Melvin L; Miller, Karen A (1979)
Abstract
For employed women, job conditions that encourage self-direction are related to effective intellectual functioning and an open, flexible orientation to others, while those tha constrain opportunities for self direction are related to ineffective intellectual functioning and a rigid social orientation. Moreover, several types of job pressures and uncertainties are related to less effective intellectual functioning, unfavorable evaluations of self, or a rigid social orientation. These relationships do not result from social selection, pay, status, or social circumstances and personal preferences, and they are of magnitudes similar to those for men. Causal analysis demonstrates that job conditions not only correlate with but actually affect psychological functioning. For women, as for men, occupational conditions have a decided psychological impact.
Key Passage
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Keywords
Gender, Women And Work, Working Conditions, Intellectual Flexibility, Reciprocity, Personality, Identity, Self, Distress, Psychology, Work Complexity, DevelopmentThemes
Kohn-Schooler, Psychological Centrality of WorkLinks to Reference
- https://doi.org/10.1086/226974
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/226974
- https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/226974
- https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/2778068.pdf?casa_token=ci7YKy79dKoAAAAA:hZY242VgRtI6Ku5FtNl94gq523s2DR5BYfNwbcOUQkZJ3Z_Hyi8aOFiuiJQeQ21SsK2yGR6PI9Mf5-ecnyq3wqRklWjgw5TRxlHehEYt7SFTauxOsDWerg
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