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United States Women's Bureau

The United States Women's Bureau (WB) is an agency of the United States government within the United States Department of Labor. The Women's Bureau works to create parity for women in the labor force by conducting research and policy analysis, to inform and promote policy change, and to increase public awareness and education.

Women's Bureau
Agency overview
FormedJune 5, 1920
Preceding agency
  • Woman in Industry Service
JurisdictionFederal government of the United States
HeadquartersFrances Perkins Building
Washington, D.C.
Employees100[1]
Agency executives
  • Wendy Chun-Hoon, Director
  • Analilia Mejia, Deputy Director
  • Joan Harrigan-Farrelly, Deputy Director
Parent departmentDepartment of Labor
Websitedol.gov/wb
Women's Bureau in 1920

The Director is appointed by the President. Prior to the Presidential Appointment Efficiency and Streamlining Act of 2011, the position required confirmation by advice and consent of the Senate.[2] Since its founding in 1920, the Director of the Women's Bureau has always been a woman. She is supported by a staff in the national office as well as ten regional offices.[3]

Establishment edit

The Women's Bureau evolved out of the Woman in Industry Service, which was established on July 1, 1918, as a war-time service to employ women.[4][5] It was headed by social activist Mary van Kleeck, who was the head of the Department of Industrial Studies at the Russell Sage Foundation. In 1917, amidst World War I, van Kleeck undertook an investigation of the possibility of employment of women in Army warehouses at the behest of the War Industries Board.[6] She recommended the creation of a Women's Bureau in the War Department, and as a result President Wilson appointed[7] van Kleeck to lead a new Women in Industry Service group, a sub-agency of the Department of Labor.[8] Van Kleeck wrote that the great numbers of women brought into the workforce by the war represented a "new freedom" for women: "freedom to serve their country through their industry not as women but as workers judged by the same standards and rewarded by the same recompense as men".[9]

The Women in Industry Service group produced a series of reports documenting wage disparities, unsafe working conditions, and discrimination against female laborers, conducting investigations in 31 states.[9][10] However, their recommendations were often ignored, and at an October 1918 conference to discuss women's labor organized by van Kleeck, Secretary of Labor William Wilson declined to take action to address wage inequality.[11] In December 1918, the group published a wide-ranging report entitled Standards for the Employment of Women in Industry, which was later used as the basis for the groundbreaking Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, which applied basic working standards to men and women throughout the country.[9][12]

After the war, van Kleeck's group became the United States Women's Bureau. Van Kleeck helped write the law enabling this transition in June 1920.[13] On July 14, van Kleeck was appointed as the head of the new agency within the Department of Labor.[14] Although she was expected to lead the Bureau permanently, van Kleeck was called away to help care for her dying mother and resigned after a few weeks. Mary Anderson, her close friend and colleague, became its first long-term director instead.[15][9]

The Bureau was established by Congress on June 5, 1920, just two months before women achieved the right to vote, and continues its responsibility to carry out Public Law 66-259; 29 U.S.C. 11–16.29 (1920)[16] Their enabling legislation gives them the duty to formulate policies and standards to promote the welfare of wage-earning women, improve their working conditions, increase their efficiency, and advance their opportunities for profitable employment. The Women's Bureau's collaboration with the National Consumers League and the Women's Educational and Industrial Union allowed the Bureau to effectively research and advocate for women workers.[16]

History edit

In the 1920s and 30s, the Women's Bureau focused on women's working conditions in industries including manufacturing, household employment and clothing industry.[4] 21% of American's employed at this time were women, who worked long hours with little wages.[17] In 1922, the WB began investigating the conditions facing 'negro women in industry.' By focusing on minority groups, Mary Anderson, the Bureau's first director, was able to get social justice legislation passed for women since the administration largely ignored these groups.[18] The WB successfully advocated for the inclusion of women under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, which, for the first time, set minimum wages and maximum working hours.

As American men were mobilized for entering World War II, many women began working in nontraditional roles such as in aircraft plants, shipyards, and manufacturing companies. These jobs also paid more than traditional "women's work". The Bureau shifted its focus in this time to achieve more skills training, wider job opportunities, higher wages and better working conditions for the 'new' female workforce.[19] The WB was an esteemed agency by 1942 and reports were consistently conservative, often repeating stereotypical ideas of women's strengths and weaknesses. However, the records of the Bureau during World War II contain a wealth of data and information about women with the focus remaining on the conditions of employed women, often neglecting middle-class women and continual support for special legislation for women's employment.[20]

In the 1940s and 50s, the WB turned its attention how women's employment outlook and opportunities changed in the postwar period.[4] After 1942, the Bureau officials hoped to have an audience in the federal government and to play a large role in labor mobilization. This hope never came to fruition and in April 1942, the War Manpower Commission headed labor mobilization. The commission, led by Paul McNutt, rejected the idea of having any woman on his labor advisory commission instead creating a Women's Advisory Committee. However, both the Bureau and the Advisory Committee's advice regarding women's employment was often disregarded.[20]

in the 1950s and 60s, the WB developed policies and programs to increase women college graduates. The WB played an instrumental role in the passage of the Equal Pay Act of 1963, which amended the Fair Labor Standards Act. It effectively removed the ability to pay employees differently, based on sex. John F. Kennedy signed the law on June 10, 1963.[4][21] However, during this time, the Bureau was opposed to the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) introduced by the National Woman's Party in 1923 until Kennedy took office in 1961. This was due to the commitment the WB had in maintaining protective labor legislation for women. During Kennedy's campaign, he needed to recognize a political constituency. However instead of supporting an ERA during his presidency, he created a Presidential Commission on the Status of Women. The commission was headed by Eleanor Roosevelt, an ERA supporter, until her death 1962, after which the commission was unofficially headed by Women's Bureau director and ERA opponent, Esther Peterson, who had advocated for the formation of the Commission early on. With Peterson as the de facto head, the final report by the commission made no flat statement for or against passage of the ERA. It did, however, urge the courts to expand the 14th amendment to grant full Constitutional equality to women.[22]

Elizabeth Duncan Koontz was the first Black woman to head the Bureau in 1969. The United Nations Commission on the Status of Women named Koontz a U.S. Delegate and with this added role, she worked with the Bureau to share research and expertise in developing countries. Under Koontz's leadership, the WB also worked to address and eliminate description against women and minorities in the workforce. They supported the proposed Equal Rights Amendment (ERA). Carmen Rosa Maymi headed the Women's Bureau in 1975 as the highest-ranking Hispanic woman in the Federal Government and the first Hispanic Director of the Bureau.[4]

Following the 1973 Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) designed to train workers and provide them with public service jobs, the Bureau began developing programs for CETA funds that focused on special counseling and referral services, women in non-traditional jobs, pre-apprenticeship training and job development. Many of these new programs were also designed to help low-income women.[4] The Bureau also had a role in the passage of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978.[17]

From 1978 to 1980, the Bureau contracted with Coal Employment Project to carry out a two-phase, experimental program in the five county mining area of Anderson, Campbell, Claiborne, Morgan, and Scott in Tennessee. CEP was a non-profit women's organization founded in 1977 with the goal of women gaining employment as miners. With local support groups in both the eastern and western coalfields, CEP also advocated for women on issues such as sexual harassment, mine safety, equal access to training and promotions, parental leave, and wages.[23]

The program with CEP centered on the development of a training program that considered the needs of women—which was accomplished with the aid of federal and state mining officials, coal industry leaders, union officials, U.S. Department of Labor Mine Safety and Health officials, state training instructors, and actual women miners. Its focus was on federally required safety instruction, information on federal and state antidiscrimination laws, union rights, physical development, techniques on assertiveness, and credit and social security rights. Also involved were all-women panels that discussed how they handled problems that often concerned women, like sexual harassment.[23]

In the 1960s, the Bureau started an on-site day care center. This led to the Bureau launching a major initiative to encourage employer-sponsored child care in 1982. The result of this initiative was the establishment of a multi-media Work and Family Clearinghouse in 1989 and the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, that mandated employers to provide employees job-protected and unpaid leave for qualified medical and family reasons.[4]

The Bureau focused on non-traditional employment for women in the 1990s, including apprenticeships and domestic workers.[4] In 1996, the WB published a fact sheet on the workplace effects of domestic violence.

In 2014, the WB teamed up with the White House and the Center for American Progress for the White House Summit on Working Families convening businesses, economists, labor leaders, legislators, advocates, and the media for a discussion on issues facing the entire spectrum of working families, including workplace flexibility, equal pay, workplace discrimination, worker retention and promotion, and childcare/early childhood education.

List of directors edit

Select publications edit

  • Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. Bureau Special Bulletin 20: Occupational Status of Women in 1944. Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1944.

References edit

  1. ^ (PDF). dol.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 October 2014. Retrieved 17 May 2014.
  2. ^ "[USC05] 29 USC Ch. 2: WOMEN'S BUREAU". uscode.house.gov. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  3. ^ "WB – Regional Map". www.dol.gov. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "WB – Our History (An Overview 1920–2012)". www.dol.gov. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  5. ^ "Records of the Women's Bureau". www.archives.gov. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  6. ^ Robins, Margaret Dreier; Rippey, Sarah Cory, eds. (1918). Life and Labor. Vol. 8. National Women's Trade Union League.
  7. ^ Reisch, Michael; Andrews, Janice (2002). The Road Not Taken: A History of Radical Social Work in the United States. Psychology Press. pp. 61–65. ISBN 9780415933995.
  8. ^ "United States Women's Bureau | United States federal agency". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  9. ^ a b c d . Inside FRASER. St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank of the United States. March 4, 2019. Archived from the original on August 16, 2019. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  10. ^ "Women's Bureau (WB) – About Us, Our History". www.dol.gov. from the original on June 19, 2019. Retrieved September 14, 2019.
  11. ^ McGuire, John Thomas (2006). Women and War. ABC-CLIO. p. 624. ISBN 9781851097708.
  12. ^ Bureau of Labor Statistics, United States (1942). Handbook of labor statistics. U.S. G.P.O. pp. 522–535.
  13. ^ "Mary Abby Van Kleeck | A Biographical Dictionary of Women Economists". search.credoreference.com. Credo Reference. Retrieved December 3, 2018.
  14. ^ Alchon, Guy (1998). "The "Self-Applauding Sincerity" of Overreaching Theory, Biography as Ethical Practice, and the Case of Mary van Kleeck". In Silverberg, Helene (ed.). Gender and American social science : the formative years. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691017492. OCLC 37806197.
  15. ^ . Five College Archives and Manuscript Collections. Archived from the original on June 21, 2015. Retrieved June 21, 2015.
  16. ^ a b "Open Collections Program: Women Working, Women's Bureau". ocp.hul.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  17. ^ a b "The Women's Bureau: A Continuous Fight Against Inequality | Section of Civil Rights and Social Justice". www.americanbar.org. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  18. ^ ""Continued Employment after the War?": The Women's Bureau Studies Postwar Plans of Women Workers". historymatters.gmu.edu. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  19. ^ a b (PDF). 1991. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 November 2015. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  20. ^ "House Resolution 5056 Prohibiting Discrimination in Pay on Account of Sex". 1944-06-19. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  21. ^ Harrison, C. (1988). On Account of Sex: The Politics of Women's Issues, 1945–1968. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  22. ^ a b "Women's bureau publication touts benefits of high-tech employment of women". PsycEXTRA Dataset. 2002. doi:10.1037/e303132004-001. Retrieved 2022-11-14.
  23. ^ "About Us, Women's Bureau - U. S. Department of Labor". www.dol.gov. Retrieved 2021-05-10.

Further reading edit

  • Hendrickson, Mark. "Gender Research as Labor Activism: The Women's Bureau in the New Era." Journal of Policy History 20.4 (2008): 482-515.
  • Laughlin, Kathleen A. Women's work and public policy: A history of the Women's Bureau, US Department of Labor, 1945-1970 (Northeastern UP, 2000). online
    • Boris, Eileen. "Women's Work and Public Policy: a History of the Women's Bureau, US Department of Labor, 1945-1970." NWSA Journal 14#1 (2002), pp. 201–207 online
  • McGuire, John Thomas. "Gender and the Personal Shaping of Public Administration in the United States: Mary Anderson and the Women's Bureau, 1920–1930." Public Administration Review 72.2 (2012): 265-271.
  • Nyland, Chris, and Mark Rix. "Mary van Kleeck, Lillian Gilbreth and the Women’s Bureau study of gendered labor law." Journal of Management History (2000). on a 1928 report
  • Sharer, Wendy B. "Genre work: Expertise and advocacy in the early bulletins of the US women's Bureau." Rhetoric Society Quarterly 33.1 (2003): 5-32. online
  • Weber, Gustavus Adolphus. The Women's Bureau: Its History, Activities, and Organization (. Johns Hopkins Press, 1923) online.

External links edit

  • Women's Bureau Home Page
  • Publications of the Women's Bureau available on FRASER, the Federal Reserve Archival System for Economic Research.

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The United States Women s Bureau WB is an agency of the United States government within the United States Department of Labor The Women s Bureau works to create parity for women in the labor force by conducting research and policy analysis to inform and promote policy change and to increase public awareness and education Women s BureauAgency overviewFormedJune 5 1920Preceding agencyWoman in Industry ServiceJurisdictionFederal government of the United StatesHeadquartersFrances Perkins BuildingWashington D C Employees100 1 Agency executivesWendy Chun Hoon DirectorAnalilia Mejia Deputy DirectorJoan Harrigan Farrelly Deputy DirectorParent departmentDepartment of LaborWebsitedol gov wbWomen s Bureau in 1920The Director is appointed by the President Prior to the Presidential Appointment Efficiency and Streamlining Act of 2011 the position required confirmation by advice and consent of the Senate 2 Since its founding in 1920 the Director of the Women s Bureau has always been a woman She is supported by a staff in the national office as well as ten regional offices 3 Contents 1 Establishment 2 History 3 List of directors 4 Select publications 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEstablishment editThe Women s Bureau evolved out of the Woman in Industry Service which was established on July 1 1918 as a war time service to employ women 4 5 It was headed by social activist Mary van Kleeck who was the head of the Department of Industrial Studies at the Russell Sage Foundation In 1917 amidst World War I van Kleeck undertook an investigation of the possibility of employment of women in Army warehouses at the behest of the War Industries Board 6 She recommended the creation of a Women s Bureau in the War Department and as a result President Wilson appointed 7 van Kleeck to lead a new Women in Industry Service group a sub agency of the Department of Labor 8 Van Kleeck wrote that the great numbers of women brought into the workforce by the war represented a new freedom for women freedom to serve their country through their industry not as women but as workers judged by the same standards and rewarded by the same recompense as men 9 The Women in Industry Service group produced a series of reports documenting wage disparities unsafe working conditions and discrimination against female laborers conducting investigations in 31 states 9 10 However their recommendations were often ignored and at an October 1918 conference to discuss women s labor organized by van Kleeck Secretary of Labor William Wilson declined to take action to address wage inequality 11 In December 1918 the group published a wide ranging report entitled Standards for the Employment of Women in Industry which was later used as the basis for the groundbreaking Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 which applied basic working standards to men and women throughout the country 9 12 After the war van Kleeck s group became the United States Women s Bureau Van Kleeck helped write the law enabling this transition in June 1920 13 On July 14 van Kleeck was appointed as the head of the new agency within the Department of Labor 14 Although she was expected to lead the Bureau permanently van Kleeck was called away to help care for her dying mother and resigned after a few weeks Mary Anderson her close friend and colleague became its first long term director instead 15 9 The Bureau was established by Congress on June 5 1920 just two months before women achieved the right to vote and continues its responsibility to carry out Public Law 66 259 29 U S C 11 16 29 1920 16 Their enabling legislation gives them the duty to formulate policies and standards to promote the welfare of wage earning women improve their working conditions increase their efficiency and advance their opportunities for profitable employment The Women s Bureau s collaboration with the National Consumers League and the Women s Educational and Industrial Union allowed the Bureau to effectively research and advocate for women workers 16 History editIn the 1920s and 30s the Women s Bureau focused on women s working conditions in industries including manufacturing household employment and clothing industry 4 21 of American s employed at this time were women who worked long hours with little wages 17 In 1922 the WB began investigating the conditions facing negro women in industry By focusing on minority groups Mary Anderson the Bureau s first director was able to get social justice legislation passed for women since the administration largely ignored these groups 18 The WB successfully advocated for the inclusion of women under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 which for the first time set minimum wages and maximum working hours As American men were mobilized for entering World War II many women began working in nontraditional roles such as in aircraft plants shipyards and manufacturing companies These jobs also paid more than traditional women s work The Bureau shifted its focus in this time to achieve more skills training wider job opportunities higher wages and better working conditions for the new female workforce 19 The WB was an esteemed agency by 1942 and reports were consistently conservative often repeating stereotypical ideas of women s strengths and weaknesses However the records of the Bureau during World War II contain a wealth of data and information about women with the focus remaining on the conditions of employed women often neglecting middle class women and continual support for special legislation for women s employment 20 In the 1940s and 50s the WB turned its attention how women s employment outlook and opportunities changed in the postwar period 4 After 1942 the Bureau officials hoped to have an audience in the federal government and to play a large role in labor mobilization This hope never came to fruition and in April 1942 the War Manpower Commission headed labor mobilization The commission led by Paul McNutt rejected the idea of having any woman on his labor advisory commission instead creating a Women s Advisory Committee However both the Bureau and the Advisory Committee s advice regarding women s employment was often disregarded 20 in the 1950s and 60s the WB developed policies and programs to increase women college graduates The WB played an instrumental role in the passage of the Equal Pay Act of 1963 which amended the Fair Labor Standards Act It effectively removed the ability to pay employees differently based on sex John F Kennedy signed the law on June 10 1963 4 21 However during this time the Bureau was opposed to the Equal Rights Amendment ERA introduced by the National Woman s Party in 1923 until Kennedy took office in 1961 This was due to the commitment the WB had in maintaining protective labor legislation for women During Kennedy s campaign he needed to recognize a political constituency However instead of supporting an ERA during his presidency he created a Presidential Commission on the Status of Women The commission was headed by Eleanor Roosevelt an ERA supporter until her death 1962 after which the commission was unofficially headed by Women s Bureau director and ERA opponent Esther Peterson who had advocated for the formation of the Commission early on With Peterson as the de facto head the final report by the commission made no flat statement for or against passage of the ERA It did however urge the courts to expand the 14th amendment to grant full Constitutional equality to women 22 Elizabeth Duncan Koontz was the first Black woman to head the Bureau in 1969 The United Nations Commission on the Status of Women named Koontz a U S Delegate and with this added role she worked with the Bureau to share research and expertise in developing countries Under Koontz s leadership the WB also worked to address and eliminate description against women and minorities in the workforce They supported the proposed Equal Rights Amendment ERA Carmen Rosa Maymi headed the Women s Bureau in 1975 as the highest ranking Hispanic woman in the Federal Government and the first Hispanic Director of the Bureau 4 Following the 1973 Comprehensive Employment and Training Act CETA designed to train workers and provide them with public service jobs the Bureau began developing programs for CETA funds that focused on special counseling and referral services women in non traditional jobs pre apprenticeship training and job development Many of these new programs were also designed to help low income women 4 The Bureau also had a role in the passage of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 17 From 1978 to 1980 the Bureau contracted with Coal Employment Project to carry out a two phase experimental program in the five county mining area of Anderson Campbell Claiborne Morgan and Scott in Tennessee CEP was a non profit women s organization founded in 1977 with the goal of women gaining employment as miners With local support groups in both the eastern and western coalfields CEP also advocated for women on issues such as sexual harassment mine safety equal access to training and promotions parental leave and wages 23 The program with CEP centered on the development of a training program that considered the needs of women which was accomplished with the aid of federal and state mining officials coal industry leaders union officials U S Department of Labor Mine Safety and Health officials state training instructors and actual women miners Its focus was on federally required safety instruction information on federal and state antidiscrimination laws union rights physical development techniques on assertiveness and credit and social security rights Also involved were all women panels that discussed how they handled problems that often concerned women like sexual harassment 23 In the 1960s the Bureau started an on site day care center This led to the Bureau launching a major initiative to encourage employer sponsored child care in 1982 The result of this initiative was the establishment of a multi media Work and Family Clearinghouse in 1989 and the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 that mandated employers to provide employees job protected and unpaid leave for qualified medical and family reasons 4 The Bureau focused on non traditional employment for women in the 1990s including apprenticeships and domestic workers 4 In 1996 the WB published a fact sheet on the workplace effects of domestic violence In 2014 the WB teamed up with the White House and the Center for American Progress for the White House Summit on Working Families convening businesses economists labor leaders legislators advocates and the media for a discussion on issues facing the entire spectrum of working families including workplace flexibility equal pay workplace discrimination worker retention and promotion and childcare early childhood education List of directors editMary van Kleeck 1920 temporary Mary Anderson 1920 1944 Frieda S Miller 1944 1953 Alice K Leopold 1953 1961 Esther Peterson 1961 1964 Mary Dublin Keyserling 1964 1969 Elizabeth Duncan Koontz 1969 1973 Carmen Rosa Maymi 1973 1977 Alexis M Herman 1977 1981 Lenora Cole Alexander 1981 1986 Shirley M Dennis 1986 1988 Jill Houghton Emery Phillips 1988 1989 Elsie Vartanian 1991 1993 Karen Nussbaum 1993 1996 Irasema T Garza 1999 2000 Shinae Chun 2001 2009 Sara Manzano Diaz 2010 2012 Latifa Lyles 2012 2017 Patricia G Greene 2017 2018 Laurie Todd Smith 2019 2021 Wendy Chun Hoon 2021 present 24 Select publications editPidgeon Mary Elizabeth Bureau Special Bulletin 20 Occupational Status of Women in 1944 Washington U S Government Printing Office 1944 References edit DOL Shutdown Plan Page Three PDF dol gov Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2014 Retrieved 17 May 2014 USC05 29 USC Ch 2 WOMEN S BUREAU uscode house gov Retrieved 1 July 2021 WB Regional Map www dol gov Retrieved 2015 10 13 a b c d e f g h WB Our History An Overview 1920 2012 www dol gov Retrieved 2015 10 13 Records of the Women s Bureau www archives gov Retrieved 2015 10 15 Robins Margaret Dreier Rippey Sarah Cory eds 1918 Life and Labor Vol 8 National Women s Trade Union League Reisch Michael Andrews Janice 2002 The Road Not Taken A History of Radical Social Work in the United States Psychology Press pp 61 65 ISBN 9780415933995 United States Women s Bureau United States federal agency Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved September 5 2019 a b c d Uncurrent Events The Woman Power Behind the Woman in Industry Service Inside FRASER St Louis Federal Reserve Bank of the United States March 4 2019 Archived from the original on August 16 2019 Retrieved September 5 2019 Women s Bureau WB About Us Our History www dol gov Archived from the original on June 19 2019 Retrieved September 14 2019 McGuire John Thomas 2006 Women and War ABC CLIO p 624 ISBN 9781851097708 Bureau of Labor Statistics United States 1942 Handbook of labor statistics U S G P O pp 522 535 Mary Abby Van Kleeck A Biographical Dictionary of Women Economists search credoreference com Credo Reference Retrieved December 3 2018 Alchon Guy 1998 The Self Applauding Sincerity of Overreaching Theory Biography as Ethical Practice and the Case of Mary van Kleeck In Silverberg Helene ed Gender and American social science the formative years Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 0691017492 OCLC 37806197 Sophia Smith Collection Mary van Kleeck Papers 1849 1998 Five College Archives and Manuscript Collections Archived from the original on June 21 2015 Retrieved June 21 2015 a b Open Collections Program Women Working Women s Bureau ocp hul harvard edu Retrieved 2015 10 13 a b The Women s Bureau A Continuous Fight Against Inequality Section of Civil Rights and Social Justice www americanbar org Retrieved 2015 10 13 WB Directors Gallery www dol gov Retrieved 2015 10 13 Continued Employment after the War The Women s Bureau Studies Postwar Plans of Women Workers historymatters gmu edu Retrieved 2015 10 15 a b A guide to the Microfilm Edition of Records of the Women s Bureau of the U S Department of Labor 1918 1965 Part II Women in World War II PDF 1991 Archived from the original PDF on 17 November 2015 Retrieved 16 November 2015 House Resolution 5056 Prohibiting Discrimination in Pay on Account of Sex 1944 06 19 Retrieved 13 October 2015 Harrison C 1988 On Account of Sex The Politics of Women s Issues 1945 1968 Berkeley University of California Press a b Women s bureau publication touts benefits of high tech employment of women PsycEXTRA Dataset 2002 doi 10 1037 e303132004 001 Retrieved 2022 11 14 About Us Women s Bureau U S Department of Labor www dol gov Retrieved 2021 05 10 Further reading editHendrickson Mark Gender Research as Labor Activism The Women s Bureau in the New Era Journal of Policy History 20 4 2008 482 515 Laughlin Kathleen A Women s work and public policy A history of the Women s Bureau US Department of Labor 1945 1970 Northeastern UP 2000 online Boris Eileen Women s Work and Public Policy a History of the Women s Bureau US Department of Labor 1945 1970 NWSA Journal 14 1 2002 pp 201 207 online McGuire John Thomas Gender and the Personal Shaping of Public Administration in the United States Mary Anderson and the Women s Bureau 1920 1930 Public Administration Review 72 2 2012 265 271 Nyland Chris and Mark Rix Mary van Kleeck Lillian Gilbreth and the Women s Bureau study of gendered labor law Journal of Management History 2000 on a 1928 report Sharer Wendy B Genre work Expertise and advocacy in the early bulletins of the US women s Bureau Rhetoric Society Quarterly 33 1 2003 5 32 online Weber Gustavus Adolphus The Women s Bureau Its History Activities and Organization Johns Hopkins Press 1923 online External links editWomen s Bureau Home Page Publications of the Women s Bureau available on FRASER the Federal Reserve Archival System for Economic Research Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States Women 27s Bureau amp oldid 1215908371, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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