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  • Title: Female access to non-primary occupations: the Indonesian case.
    Author: Moir HV.
    Journal: Majalah Demografi Indones; 1980 Dec; 7(14):50-75. PubMed ID: 12338728.
    Abstract:
    Focus in this discussion is on the range of nonprimary occupations open to women in Indonesia compared to those open to men. Particular attention is directed to the question of whether given occupations (particularly those that are important sources of employment) are more or less open to women in urban compared to rural areas. Whether an occupation is open to women or not is defined on the basis of the proportion female in that occupation. Where the proportion female is high, it is evident that women have a substantial degree of access to that occupation. In contrast, where the proportion female is very low, it is obviously unusual for women to enter that occupation and female access to such occupations is relatively restricted. The data presented refer to the employed population, i.e., the economically active population excluding the unemployed. The 1971 Population Census is used to maintain seasonal comparability with other analyses of the Indonesian workforce and to allow for seasonal comparability with the data from the 1980 Population Census. Out of 75 nonprimary occupation groups, 39 are excluded from the analysis because in most provinces they employ less than 0.1% of the labor force. The percentage of the male workforce in rural areas that is engaged in the remaining 36 occupations is less than the percentage of the female rural workforce engaged in these same occupations (95.0 compared to 98.2% in Java-Bali and 94.1 compared to 97.4% in the Outer Islands). In urban areas, male-female differences in the percentage concentrated in these 36 occupations are slightly larger (4.4 percentage points in urban compared to 3.2 percentage points in rural Java-Bali and 5.6 and 3.3 percentage points for urban and rural areas in the Outer Islands). A negative association was found between the degree of occupational segregation by sex and the relative modernness of an area, i.e., occupational segregation by sex is greatest in the least modern area of the country, the rural areas of the other islands, and is lowest in the metropolitan area of Jakarta. Although occupational segregation is lower in Jakarta than elsewhere in Indonesia, it is still quite high with an Index value of 51.2. Women were found to be underrepresented in the upper level occupations in all areas of Indonesia. The degree of underrepresentation was considerably greater in rural than in urban areas. Women are over-represented in sales and service occupations, and within these broad categories are most dominant in the more traditional sector of the economy than is the male labor force.
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