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  1. Equality and cumulative disadvantage: Response to Baxter and Wright.Bandana Purkayastha & Myra Marx Ferree - 2000 - Gender and Society 14 (6):809-813.
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  • Gender Differences in Productivity: Research Specialization as a Missing Link.Erin Leahey - 2006 - Gender and Society 20 (6):754-780.
    Since 1984, when Cole and Zuckerman referred to gender differences in productivity among academic scientists as a puzzle, sociologists have sought to explain these differences by incorporating primarily institutional-level factors. In addition to these factors, the author contends that an undertheorized and heretofore unmeasured concept—the extent of research specialization—can also help explain the process by which gender affects research productivity. Although some researchers have examined areas of specialization, the extent of research specialization has been completely neglected in studies of academic (...)
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  • Protest engendered: The participation of women steelworkers in the wheeling-pittsburgh steel strike of 1985.Mary Margaret Fonow - 1998 - Gender and Society 12 (6):710-728.
    This article examines the participation of women in the 1985 labor strike at Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel. The author views the strike as a deeply gendered act of protest where the issues, strategies, tactics, and resources used by women workers differ from those used by men, and simultaneously, as the occupational site that provided workers an opportunity to affirm, to modify, and to contest their understandings of gender. Paradoxically, women both challenge and conform to normative gender scripts for protest. They resisted the (...)
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