StoryLine Issue No. 2 Fall 2020

REFERENCES FOR ALBINA EMELINA ' S ESSAY , " PUBLIC OPINION ON WORKING MOTHERS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIPS WITH THEIR CHILDREN ," CONTINUED

Endendijk, J. J., Groeneveld, M. G., Berkel, S. R., Hallers-Haalboom, E. T., Mesman, J., & Mandel, H., & Semyonov, M. (2005). "Family policies, wage structures, and gender gaps: Sources of earnings inequality in 20 countries." American Sociological Review , 70(6), 949-967

Motro, J., & Vanneman, R. (2015). "The 1990s shift in the media portrayal of working mothers." Sociological Forum , 30(4), 1017-1037.

Okimoto, T. G., & Heilman, M. E. (2012). "The 'bad parent' assumption: how gender stereotypes affect reactions to working mothers." Journal of Social Issues, 68(4), 704-724. Parenting in America. (2015). Retrieved 2017, from http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2015/12/17/parenting-in-america/ Poduval, J., & Poduval, M. (2009). Working mothers: How much working, how much mothers, and where is the womanhood? Mens Sana Monographs, 7(1), 63. doi:10.4103/0973-1229.41799 Smith, T. W., Marsden, P., Hout, M., and Kim, J. (2013). General Social Surveys, 1972-2012. National Science Foundation; National Opinion Research Center, Chicago; The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, University of Connecticut Storrs, CT. Won, S. (2015). State policy? Traditional gender stereotypes? Relative contributions of factors affecting positive work-family interface for working mothers in Korea. Gender, Work & Organization , 23(2), 147-164.

University of Berkeley. (2014). SDA - GSS 1972-2014 cumulative datafile. Retrieved from http://sda.berkeley.edu/sdaweb/analysis/?dataset=gss14

Young, C. (2000). Mommy wars. Reason , 32(3), 18

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