Uneven Rewards

Uneven Rewards

Milestones in Labour Economics

Authored by: Alison L Booth

Coming soon

Notify me

Description

Uneven Rewards brings together major studies of workplace relations and behaviour from the distinguished labour economist Alison L Booth. Over more than three decades, Booth has forged a distinctive intellectual path combining a strong interest in the role of gender and culture on labour markets with acute expertise in data collection, and cognate social science fields and methods.

With her co-authors, Booth examines the effects on men and women of evolving industrial relations’ rules and contexts. She studies the changing gendered and culturally-specific nature of labour markets, and analyses the findings of a set of data-rich social experiments to reveal insights about women’s and men’s behaviour in labour, educational and wider social settings.

Finally, Booth shares new conclusions arising from this extensive body of research. She shows how culture and nurture associated with the upbringing of boys and girls can have profound implications for educational and labour market performance and relative outcomes by gender:

There is no right or wrong place for young women and men to be. What matters is that they are given the opportunity to go where their talents lead them without being thwarted by cultural pressures.

Details

ISBN (print):
9781760467296
ISBN (online):
9781760467302
Imprint:
ANU Press
DOI:
http://doi.org/10.22459/UR.2026
Series:
Global Thinkers Series
Disciplines:
Business & Economics; Social Sciences: Gender Studies
Countries:
World

PDF Chapters

Uneven Rewards »

Please read Conditions of use before downloading the formats.

If your web browser doesn't automatically open these files, please download a PDF reader application such as the free Adobe Acrobat Reader.

To copy a chapter DOI link, right-click (on a PC) or control+click (on a Mac) and then select ‘Copy link location’.

Section I: Evolving industrial relations and neoliberalism

  1. The free rider problem and a social custom model of trade union membership (PDF, 233 KB)Alison L Booth doi
  2. The productivity effects of performance-related pay (PDF, 454 KB)Alison L Booth and Jeff Frank doi
  3. Temporary jobs and neoliberalism (PDF, 404 KB)Alison L Booth, Marco Francesconi and Jeff Frank doi
  4. Wage determination and imperfect competition (PDF, 229 KB)Alison L Booth doi
  5. Testing some predictions of human capital theory: New training evidence from Great Britain (PDF, 234 KB)Alison L Booth and Mark L Bryan doi
  6. Work-related training and the minimum wag (PDF, 241 KB)Wiji Arulampalam, Alison L Booth and Mark L Bryan doi

Section II: Men and women in the labour market

  1. Is there a glass ceiling over Europe? Exploring the gender pay gap across the wage distribution (PDF, 478 KB)Wiji Arulampalam, Alison L Booth and Mark L Bryan doi
  2. Hours of work and gender identity: Does part-time work make the family happier? (PDF, 445 KB)Alison L Booth and Jan C van Ours doi
  3. Does ethnic discrimination vary across minority groups? Evidence from a field experiment (PDF, 416 KB)Alison L Booth, Andrew Leigh and Elena Varganova doi

Section III: Gendered behavioural responses: Evidence from experiments

  1. Gender differences in risk behaviour: Does nurture matter? (PDF, 367 KB)Alison L Booth and Patrick Nolen doi
  2. Do single-sex classes affect academic achievement? An experiment in a co‑educational university (PDF, 474 KB)Alison L Booth, Lina Cardona Sosa and Patrick Nolen doi
  3. Gender differences in willingness to compete: The role of culture and institutions (PDF, 473 KB)Alison L Booth, Elliott Fan, Xin Meng and Dandan Zhang doi
  4. Performance in mixed-sex and single-sex competitions: What we can learn from speedboat races in Japan (PDF, 375 KB)Alison L Booth and Eiji Yamamura doi
  5. Gendered performance in competitions: Learning from a Korean quiz show (PDF, 439 KB)Alison L Booth and Jungmin Lee doi

Other publications that may interest you