Rainbow-Collar Jobs? Occupational Segregation by Sexual Orientation in the United States

Lesbian and gay workers hold different occupations than straight workers, partly reflecting lesbian and gay workers’ tendency to avoid same-gender-dominated occupations. Previous studies have grappled with significant data limitations, obscuring patterns for bisexual workers and potentially biasing...

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Main Author: Ryan Finnigan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-09-01
Series:Socius
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023120954795
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spelling doaj-a220548150174188a0b16e13bde5f8db2021-04-02T17:42:11ZengSAGE PublishingSocius2378-02312020-09-01610.1177/2378023120954795Rainbow-Collar Jobs? Occupational Segregation by Sexual Orientation in the United StatesRyan Finnigan0University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USALesbian and gay workers hold different occupations than straight workers, partly reflecting lesbian and gay workers’ tendency to avoid same-gender-dominated occupations. Previous studies have grappled with significant data limitations, obscuring patterns for bisexual workers and potentially biasing estimates of occupational segregation by sexual orientation. In this study the author addresses these limitations using large-scale, nationally representative data from the 2013–2018 National Health Interview Survey. Occupational segregation by sexual orientation is stronger among men than women. Within gender, lesbian/gay and bisexual workers are as segregated from each other as they are from straight workers. These differences are structured by both occupational gender composition and education: occupational segregation by sexual orientation is greatest among less educated workers and when correlated with occupational gender composition. These findings contribute to a more detailed empirical description of labor market inequalities by sexual orientation and offer some empirical puzzles for further theoretical development.https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023120954795
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ryan Finnigan
spellingShingle Ryan Finnigan
Rainbow-Collar Jobs? Occupational Segregation by Sexual Orientation in the United States
Socius
author_facet Ryan Finnigan
author_sort Ryan Finnigan
title Rainbow-Collar Jobs? Occupational Segregation by Sexual Orientation in the United States
title_short Rainbow-Collar Jobs? Occupational Segregation by Sexual Orientation in the United States
title_full Rainbow-Collar Jobs? Occupational Segregation by Sexual Orientation in the United States
title_fullStr Rainbow-Collar Jobs? Occupational Segregation by Sexual Orientation in the United States
title_full_unstemmed Rainbow-Collar Jobs? Occupational Segregation by Sexual Orientation in the United States
title_sort rainbow-collar jobs? occupational segregation by sexual orientation in the united states
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Socius
issn 2378-0231
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Lesbian and gay workers hold different occupations than straight workers, partly reflecting lesbian and gay workers’ tendency to avoid same-gender-dominated occupations. Previous studies have grappled with significant data limitations, obscuring patterns for bisexual workers and potentially biasing estimates of occupational segregation by sexual orientation. In this study the author addresses these limitations using large-scale, nationally representative data from the 2013–2018 National Health Interview Survey. Occupational segregation by sexual orientation is stronger among men than women. Within gender, lesbian/gay and bisexual workers are as segregated from each other as they are from straight workers. These differences are structured by both occupational gender composition and education: occupational segregation by sexual orientation is greatest among less educated workers and when correlated with occupational gender composition. These findings contribute to a more detailed empirical description of labor market inequalities by sexual orientation and offer some empirical puzzles for further theoretical development.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023120954795
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