Gender Roles in Women’s Labour Force Participation

  • Abstract
  • Literature Map
  • Similar Papers
Abstract
Translate article icon Translate Article Star icon
Take notes icon Take Notes

This study introduces a theoretical framework of women’s labour force participation (LFP) decision as a manifestation of two opposing forces—the labour market’s ‘push’ in favour of, and social institutions’ ‘pull’ away from participation. The socioculturally diverse southwestern Indian state of Kerala is chosen as the ideal setting to test this framework. Using data from two rounds of the Kerala Migration Survey (KMS)—2013 and 2018—the study finds that higher levels of education reduce the likelihood that women participate in the labour force. This article also addresses the impact of a shock to migration—the Nitaqat system—on women’s LFP and finds evidence that long-standing social norms that prevent women’s LFP can change under economic crises such as the Nitaqat system that caused a large-scale return migration of Muslim emigrants from the Gulf countries. We find that prior to the migration shock, in the Muslim-dominated Malabar region, the strong social norms of the Sunni Muslims permeates across religions, which discourages women's LFP. Due to the return migration of predominantly Muslim men prompted by the Nitaqat system, we find evidence of a more favorable attitude towards women's labor force participation (LFP) in the Malabar region. By studying women’s LFP in Kerala, which has a significant proportion of Hindus, Christians and Muslims, the article finds support for LFP decisions as influenced by categorical identity affiliations.

Similar Papers
  • Conference Article
  • 10.36880/c13.02532
Kadınların İşgücüne Katılımı ve Ekonomik Büyüme: Geçiş Ekonomileri Üzerine Bulgular
  • Aug 1, 2021
  • Neşe Algan + 1 more

Sustainable economic growth at national and global level depends on the significant participation of women in the labor force. Because women compose half of the world population in terms of human capital and labor. Despite the developments in recent years, there is still gender inequality in labor markets around the world and labor force participation rate of women is lower than men. There are many factors affecting the participation of women in the labor force in all developed and developing countries. The effect levels of these factors on the participation rate differ depending on the development levels of the countries. In this context, the role of women's education and labor force participation on development is an important issue especially for all developing country. Therefore, the aim of the study is to examine the relationship between women's labor force participation rates and economic growth in transition economies. For this purpose, the generalized method of moments, which is a dynamic panel data analysis technique, is applied in the study using data between 1995-2019. Analysis findings reveal that there is a U-shaped relationship between women's labor force participation rate and economic growth in transition economies competible with the literature. As a result, reducing gender inequality and increasing women's labor force participation rates positively affect economic growth, income inequality and social welfare, so it is great importance that policy practitioners create a comprehensive women's employment policy and ensure that women play an active role in the labor force.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 20
  • 10.1016/j.jebo.2021.06.015
The asymmetric role of crime in women's and men's labour force participation: Evidence from India
  • Jun 28, 2021
  • Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
  • Ankita Mishra + 2 more

The asymmetric role of crime in women's and men's labour force participation: Evidence from India

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 23
  • 10.2307/353833
Mothers' Labor Force Participation in New York City: A Reappraisal of the Influence of Household Extension
  • Feb 1, 1995
  • Journal of Marriage and the Family
  • Emily Rosenbaum + 1 more

This study examines whether living with other adults enables married and single mothers in New York City to enter the labor market. Multivariate analyses of data on over 8,000 households revealed that living with coresident adults increased the participation of Puerto Rican, Dominican, and Asian single mothers, and enabled all mothers of young children and all foreign-born mothers to enter the labor market. In a separate analysis of extended households, the proportions of elderly and employed coresident adults increased women 's labor force participation, while the proportion of coresident adults who reported child care/family responsibilities as their reason for not being in the labor force decreased women's paid labor activity. Our findings suggest that coresident adults serve different functions within the household, which in turn influence women's labor force decisions in various ways. In recent years attention has focused on the various ways in which families manage social and economic difficulties. One strategy that has received considerable research attention is household extension, or the incorporation of adults other than the husband and wife into the household. Incorporating other adults may benefit the household in a number of ways. Co-resident adults may contribute to the household's pool of financial resources, thereby potentially increasing the economic well-being of household members. Or they may provide domestic labor, which might enable the wife or female householder to devote more time to paid employment. Angel and Tienda (1982) argued that household extension may be an important adaptive strategy for minority families, in that additional income contributions may compensate for low earnings or sporadic unemployment. In this article we analyze the relationship between household extension and mothers' labor force participation among six racial and ethnic groups in New York City. In so doing, we largely replicate an earlier analysis by Tienda and Glass (1985) using current data from one of the nation's most diverse cities. However, we expand upon the earlier analysis in three ways: by including an indicator of the supply of child care in the household, by examining a broader array of racial/ethnic groups, and by analyzing the role that birthplace plays in influencing women's labor market behavior. DETERMINANTS OF WOMEN'S LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION Family structure has long been recognized as an important determinant of women's labor force participation. Typically, family characteristics--such as marital status, the presence of young children, and the presence of coresident adults--affect the amount of time women can spend in domestic and market activities. Including other adults in the household may ease the strain of balancing domestic and market responsibilities, especially for single mothers and mothers of young children who may have the least flexibility in devoting time to the labor market. Prior research has shown that women who live in extended households are more likely than women who do not live with coresident adults to be in the labor force, yet this relationship varies by race/ethnicity (Barry Figueroa & Melendez, 1993; Stier, 1991; Stier & Tienda, 1992; Tienda & Glass, 1985). Moreover, women's labor force behavior appears to be influenced by the specific characteristics of coresident adults. For example, as the number of coresident adults increases, married mothers' participation decreases, suggesting greater domestic burdens; by contrast, as the proportion of female coresident adults increases so does single mothers' participation, suggesting that coresident women function as surrogate domestic workers (Tienda & Glass, 1985). Living with coresident employed adults increases labor force participation among young mothers, while living with coresident nonworking adults--presumably a source of child care--depresses paid labor activity (Parish, Hao, & Hogan, 1991). …

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 17
  • 10.2307/591680
Women's Labour Force Participation and Socioeconomic Development: Influences of Local Context and Individual Characteristics in Brazil
  • Mar 1, 1993
  • The British Journal of Sociology
  • M D R Evans + 1 more

We address several key hypotheses about the effects of socioeconomic development on women's labour force participation during the transition from agriculture to industrialism. To this end, we explore differences in women's labour force participation in Brazil by education, marital status, age, and urban or rural residence. We also show how socioeconomic development affects the overall level of women's participation and the differentials by education, etc. Our data are drawn from a large 1973 PNAD (Pequisa Nacional por Amostra de Domicilos) survey conducted by the Brazilian census bureau. Socioeconomic development in different parts of Brazil ranges from pre-industrial agriculture to heavy industry. Using logistic regression, we show that the general level of women's labour force participation does not change with the level of development. Highly educated women are much more likely than the less educated to be in the labour force (net of other influences); this difference is substantially greater than in post-industrial societies. Somewhat surprisingly, the influence of education is the same across the range of development levels in Brazil. Single women are more likely to be in the labour force than married women, and the difference grows during development. Age has a curvilinear relationship to labour force participation, and the old are much less likely to participate in more developed places. Rural women are slightly more likely to be in the labour force at all levels of development.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 21
  • 10.1111/j.1467-6435.1994.tb02256.x
Fertility-mortality variations across LDCs: women's education, labor force participation, and contraceptive-use.
  • May 1, 1994
  • Kyklos
  • Ram D Singh

UN and World Bank data on developing countries were used to examine variations across countries in child mortality and fertility patterns and to determine the impact of literacy and schooling, labor force participation of women, contraceptive use, availability of health services, and households headed by women on fertility rates and child mortality. The Schultz-Becker theoretical framework formed the basis of the analysis with ordinary least squares methods and extreme bounds analysis (EBA) used to test for robustness. The findings were that fertility was decreased due to women's human capital, women's labor force participation, and married women's use of contraception. The most powerful effect on fertility was contraceptive use, followed by women's labor force participation. Without contraceptive use in the model, women's literacy and school enrollments were negative and statistically significant. 66-81% of the variation in fertility rates was explained. EBA results showed the main variables as stable and consistent and, consequently, robust. Child mortality was strongly affected by women's schooling and labor force participation. Child mortality was negatively affected by availability of trained health services personnel at birth. Households headed by women had higher child mortality, but the association was weak. The main variables explained 84-89% of the variation in child mortality, and EBA results confirmed robustness. Socioeconomic improvement without attention to the health and educational needs of women would be counterproductive. Unfortunately, the structural adjustment program has resulted in the decline in health and educational services in developing countries, which severely affects low income women and households headed by women.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 6
  • 10.1016/0362-3319(93)90004-f
Housing cost and married women's labor force participation in 1980
  • Mar 1, 1993
  • The Social Science Journal
  • James L Starkey + 1 more

Housing cost and married women's labor force participation in 1980

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.9734/acri/2021/v21i230228
Women's Participation in Labor Force in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA): A Review of Determinants and Impacts
  • Apr 17, 2021
  • Archives of Current Research International
  • Victoria Matatio Elia Guli + 1 more

Background: In the last few decades, there has been a significant increase in women's participation in gainful employment in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). This scooping review has primarily aimed at assessing the key determinants and effects of women's involvement in the labor force in SSA.
 Methods: The authors did the review based on 19 articles selected from PubMed and goggle search. The selection considered only those published in the last 15 years, conducted based on large sample from Sub-Saharan African countries, and those exclusively related to women’s Labor Force Participation (LFP). More than 80% of the reviewed studies (16 of the 19) employed a cross-sectional study design with quantitative approaches.
 Results: The review witnessed that women's labor force participation in SSA is determined by various individual, household, and community characteristics. Women with lower fertility, living in poor economic condition (low wealth quantiles), and those with above primary education were more likely to participate in gainful employment. Other demographic factors explaining why some women participate in the labor force more often than others include women's age, marital status, number of under-five children, household size, and headship. Among the community variables, living in areas with better infrastructure (transport and communication) increased the likelihood of women’s participation in gainful employment. Nearly all studies showed significant positive impacts of women's labor force participation on several domains of women's life and household well-being, such as on women's nutrition, childcare, and health service utilization.
 Conclusion: The review implies that despite concerns about some adverse impacts of women's participation in gainful employment (such as on childcare), most of the studies indicated positive effects of LFP on women's and children's health, nutrition, and overall household well-being in SSA.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 17
  • 10.1093/sf/sox011
The Effects of Women's Labor Force Participation: An Explanation of Changes in Household Income Inequality
  • Feb 7, 2017
  • Social Forces
  • Naoki Sudo

Some previous studies of the relationship between women's labor force participation and household income inequality indicate that the promotion of the former has an equalizing effect on the latter; other studies insist that the promotion of women's labor force participation has a widening effect on household income inequality by way of the tendency toward assortative marriage. Hence, the relationship between women's labor force participation and household income inequality is unclear in the literature. This study aims to clarify the mechanism through which the interaction between household income and marriage produces social inequality by using mathematical and simulation-based approaches. The presented findings suggest that the promotion of women's labor force participation has a temporary widening effect on household income inequality, but an attenuating effect in the long run. They also state that assortative marriage itself has no widening effect on household income inequality, but rather an accelerating effect on widening inequality. Finally, by applying the model of that mechanism to Japan, I examine changes in household income inequality in that country.

  • Research Article
  • 10.46827/ejes.v0i0.2414
The Relationship between Women's Education with Women's Labor Participation and National Income: A Research on G20 Countries.
  • May 6, 2019
  • European Journal of Education Studies
  • Kasım Karakütük + 1 more

The purpose of this research is to reveal the relationship between women’s education, women's labor force participation and national income in G20 countries. The relationships between women's education, women's labor force participation and national income were analyzed by the panel data analysis method for the G20 countries for the period 1997-2018. Stability of series were tested by Fisher ADF and Fisher PP panel root tests and the series were determined to be I (1). Pedroni (2004) was used to test the existence of cointegration relationships between the series. The series were found to be cointegrated. The long- and short-term relationships of the series were analyzed by the Panel DOLS method and it is determined that the increase of female schooling level increase the female labor force participation rate, increase of female schooling level and female labor force participation rate increase the per capita (real) national income. A two-way causality relationship was found between the ratio of women in higher education and national income per person. In addition, two-way causality relations between women's labor force participation rates and schooling rates at all levels of women were determined. In the study, it is concluded that in G20 countries, women's schooling rate increases the women's participation in the labor market and increases of women's schooling rate and female employment increase the national income per capita in countries. Article visualizations:

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 17
  • 10.1007/s10900-015-0120-3
Availability of Child Care in Rural Communities: Implications for Workforce Recruitment and Retention.
  • Nov 24, 2015
  • Journal of Community Health
  • Carrie Henning-Smith + 1 more

The objective of this study was to identify differences in child care availability by rural-urban location for all counties in Wisconsin, and describe implications for recruitment and retention of health care workforce. We used data on licensed child care slots for young children (age <5), socio-demographic characteristics, women's and men's labor force participation, and household structure for all counties in Wisconsin in 2013 (n=72). Data came from KIDS COUNT, County Health Rankings, and the American Community Survey. We used t tests to analyze bivariate differences in child care availability and community characteristics by metropolitan, micropolitan, and non-core rural location. We then used ordinary least squares regression to analyze the relationship between geographic location and child care slots, adjusting for labor force participation and household structure. Rural counties had significantly fewer licensed child care slots per child than metropolitan and micropolitan counties. These counties also had, on average, higher rates of poverty and higher unemployment than micropolitan and metropolitan counties. The association between geographic location and child care availability remained, even after adjusting for household structure and labor force participation. The number of hours men worked and the percentage of men not working were both negatively associated with available child care slots, whereas there was not a significant relationship between women's labor force participation and child care availability. Rural areas face health care workforce shortages. Recruitment strategies to overcome shortages must move beyond individual-level incentives to focus on community context and family support, including availability of child care in rural counties.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 2
  • 10.2139/ssrn.1559285
Assessing the Impact of Education and Marriage on Labor Market Exit Decisions of Women
  • Mar 9, 2020
  • SSRN Electronic Journal
  • Julie L Hotchkiss + 2 more

Working Paper 2010-2 February 2010 Abstract: During the late 1990s, the convergence of women's labor force participation rates to men's rates came to a halt. This paper explores the degree to which the role of education and marriage in women's labor supply decisions also changed over this time period. Specifically, this paper investigates women's decisions to exit the labor market upon the birth of a child. The results indicate that changing exit behavior among married, educated women at this period in their lives was not likely the driving force behind the aggregate changes seen in labor force participation. Rather, changes in exit rates among single women, particularly those less educated, are much more consistent with the changing pattern of aggregate female labor force participation. JEL classification: J22, J11 Key words: labor force participation, labor supply, labor market exit, opt administrative data I. Introduction and Background In the late 1990s, the steady march of women's labor force participation rates towards convergence with those of men came to a halt. There is no consensus in the literature as to the source of this change in labor force patterns, although much of the attention has focused on the behavior of married and highly educated women, especially those with children (e.g., Cohany and Sok 2007). The analysis in this paper will focus on the role marriage and education play in women's decisions to exit the labor market at a time of major transition--the birth of a child--and how the importance of those factors changed during the 1990s. The relevance of investigating exit decisions arises from the attention some literature has given to the notion that women, particularly married and educated women, are opting out, meaning they were previously attached to the labor market and are increasingly choosing to exit (Boushey 2005 and Goldin 2006). Many have identified that the recent decline in labor force participation rates of women has been concentrated among highly educated women with young children (Goldin 2006, Bradbury and Katz 2005). Others have identified both characteristics and behavior (e.g., Reimers and Stone 2007 and Hotchkiss 2006), as well as strength of the labor market (Boushey 2005), as contributors to the observed decline in labor force participation. If the declining labor force participation rates among women can be tied to changes in behavior among married and educated women, one would expect to see those behavioral changes reflected in decisions made during a particularly transitional period in women's lives. The birth of a child has been found to have a profound impact on the decision of women to exit the labor market, even among very highly educated women (Herr and Wolfram 2009). Figure 1 shows the incidence of women exiting the workforce after giving birth, based on the data used in this analysis. The exit rate flattened in the late 1990s and then began increasing in 2000 (with a slight down tick in 2002, which is the last year of available birth data). This exit pattern is consistent with the flattening out and subsequent decline of the national labor force participation rates of women which began in the late 1990s, also shown in the figure. [Figure 1 here] The analysis in this paper covers the period 1994-2002, and combines vital statistics birth information with employment data in order to capture information on the immediate factors that affect decisions to exit the workforce at time of birth, including information on the mother and child's health, the characteristics of the mother's industry and firm, and the mother's employment history. We find that the impact of marriage and education on exit decisions did change through the 1990s, but not in a way that would be expected, given the focus on the behavior of married, educated women. As it turns the exit pattern depicted in Figure 1 was driven by changing behavior of single women, both high school and college educated. …

  • Research Article
  • 10.2139/ssrn.2409545
Unanticipated Effects of California's Paid Family Leave Program
  • Jan 1, 2014
  • SSRN Electronic Journal
  • Tirthatanmoy Das + 1 more

We examine the effect of California Paid Family Leave (CPFL) on young women's (less than 42 years of age) labor force participation and unemployment. CPFL enables workers to take at most six weeks of paid leave over a 12 month period in order to bond with new born or adopted children, or to care for sick family members or ailing parents. The policy benefits women, especially young women, since they are more prone to take such a leave. However, the effect of the policy on labor market outcomes is less clear. We apply difference-in-difference techniques to identify the effects of the CPFL legislation on young women's labor force participation and unemployment.We find that the labor force participation rate, the unemployment rate, and the duration of unemployment among young women rose in California compared to states that did not adopt paid family leave. The latter two findings regarding higher young women's unemployment and unemployment duration are unanticipated effects of the CPFL program. We utilize a unique placebo test to validate the robustness of these results.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 8
  • 10.1016/j.wsif.2022.102621
Militarization, women's labor force participation, and gender inequality: Evidence from global data
  • Jul 20, 2022
  • Women's Studies International Forum
  • Adem Y Elveren + 2 more

Militarization, women's labor force participation, and gender inequality: Evidence from global data

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.15408/sjie.v10i2.20214
Does Women’s Participation in Politics Matter for Economic Development in OIC-15? An Islamic Perspective
  • Jul 23, 2021
  • Signifikan: Jurnal Ilmu Ekonomi
  • Sari Ramdayani + 2 more

This study aims to empirically determine and analyze the role of women's participation in politics, female population growth, trade balance, and women's labor force participation in promoting economic development across 15 OIC countries during the 2006-2017 period, both in short- and long-run from an Islamic perspective. Using the Panel Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) method, this study found that, in the short term, trade balance and women's labor force participation have promoted Islamic economic development. In contrast, women's participation has a negative effect on the economic development of OIC countries. In the long term, on the other hand, all variables have promoted Islamic economic development in OIC countries, except for the trade balance variable. These findings suggest that coordination and synergy for strengthening economic development among OIC countries need to be enhanced, focusing on women's role in politics, labor force, quality of population, and economic dimensions.JEL Classification: C33, F16, J16, O11, P48Ramdayani, S., Majid, M. S. A., &amp; Suriani, S. (2021). Does Women's Participation in Politics Matter for Economic Development in OIC-15? An Islamic Perspective. Signifikan: Jurnal Ilmu Ekonomi, 10 (2), 209-222. https://doi.org/10.15408/sjie.v10i2.20214.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 13
  • 10.5860/choice.47-3524
Gendered trajectories: women, work, and social change in Japan and Taiwan
  • Feb 1, 2010
  • Choice Reviews Online
  • Wei‐Hsin Yu

CONTENTS List of Tables and Figures xxx Acknowledgments xxxs Chapter One Gender Inequality and Social Change in Japan and Taiwan 1 Chapter Two The Development of Women's Labor Market Experiences 000 Chapter Three Comparing Labor Market Structures and Workplace Dynamics 000 Chapter Four Patterns of Labor Exits among Women 000 Chapter Five Challenges from the Home Front 000 Chapter Six Returning to the Labor Force 000 Chapter Seven Higher Education and Gender Inequality 000 Chapter Eight Conclusion 000 Appendix A Description of the Data Sources 000 Appendix B Supplementary Tables 000 Notes 000 Bibliography 000 Index 000 [[starts on page vii]] TABLES AND FIGURES Tables 1.1. Comparison of Japan and Taiwan 000 2.1. Average number of jobs experienced throughout men's and women's employment careers 000 2.2. Distributions of current labor market locations by gender and frequency of employer changes 3.1. Occupational Distributions of the Female Labor Force in Japan and Taiwan 6.1. Description of Work Trajectories of Homemaking Women, Ages 25-60 B.1. Descriptive Statistics of the SSM and TSC Samples by Gender B.2. Ordinary Least Squares Regression Analysis of Log Annual Earnings B.3. Discrete-Time Event History Models Predicting Labor Force Exits at Any Point of Time B.4. Discrete-Time Event History Models Predicting Labor Force Exit upon Marriage B.5. Discrete-Time Event History Models Predicting Labor Force Exit around First Childbirth B.6. Discrete-Time Event History Models Predicting Labor Force Reentry B.7. Multinomial Logit Models Predicting Married Women's Current Work Status in Japan B.8. Multinomial Logit Models Predicting Women's Current Occupational Status B.9. Multinomial Logit Models Predicting Women's Current Organizational Locations B.10. Multinomial Logit Models Predicting Women's Current Employment Status Figures Annual economic growth rates in Japan and Taiwan, 1956-2005 000 Women's Labor Force Participation and Number of Children by Age Group Age Distributions of Brides and Mothers Giving Live Birth in 2004/2005 Attitudes Regarding Gender Roles in Japan and Taiwan Trends in Female Labor Force Participation During the Life Course Distributions of Women's Careers in Japan and Taiwan Proportion of Ever-Married Women Returning to the Labor Force by Various Ages Percentage of Workers with Experience of Within-Organizational Job Shifting by Current Occupation Job Mobility and Percent Changes in Annual Earnings Predicted Annual Earnings by Gender, Country, and Employment Status 3.1. Distribution of the Labor Force by Industry, 1951-2000 3.2. Unemployment and Nonfarm Labor Force Growth Rates, 1950-2000 3.3. Annual Increases in the Male Population of Working Age, 1950-2000 3.4. Comparisons of the Labor Force by Firm Size in Japan and Taiwan 4.1. Explanatory Framework 4.2. Occupational Effects on Ever-Married Women's Labor Force Exits at Various Times 4.3. Effects of Firm Size on Ever-Married Women's Labor Force Exits at Various Times 4.4. Relative Odds of Labor Force Exit of Public- to Private-Sector Employees 4.5. Effects of Individual Characteristics on the Likelihood of Exiting the Labor Force 4.6. Predicted Probabilities for Labor Force Exit in the Marriage Year 5.1. Percentage of Japanese Men at Home by Eight O'Clock on Weekdays 5.2. Percent Approval of Working Mothers with Young Children among Taiwanese Women, by Education 5.3. Trends of Male-Wage-to-Household-Spending Ratio and Family Size, 1965-2000 6.1. Labor Force Participation Rates of Seven Birth Cohorts at Various Ages 6.2. Estimated Probability of Labor Force Reentry, Hypothetical Cases 6.3. Comparison of Occupations before and after a Work Interruption 6.4. Comparison of Firm Size between the Female Labor Force and Women Reentrants 6.5. Comparison of Employment Status between the Female Labor Force and Women Reentrants 6.6. Effects of Postmarital Entry on Women's Current Work Status in Japan 7.1. School Systems in Japan and Taiwan 7.2. Estimated Advancement Rates to Various Educational Institutions among Taiwanese Middle- School Graduates, 1950-1998 7.3. Trends in Percent Female among Students in Tertiary Institutions 7.4. Trends in Percent Female Students Admitted to the University of Tokyo and National Taiwan University 7.5. Percentage of Students in Applied Science Programs by Educational Level in Taiwan 7.6. Percent Female Students in Four-Year Universities by University Ownership 8.1. Likelihood of Job Locations of Married versus Single Women 8.2. Comparisons of Japanese Women's Occupational Distributions 8.3. Percentage of Ever-Married, Working-Age Taiwanese Women in the Labor Force by Their First Occupation 8.4. Job Growth Rates by Gender and Employment Status in Japan, 1996-2007

Save Icon
Up Arrow
Open/Close
  • Ask R Discovery Star icon
  • Chat PDF Star icon

AI summaries and top papers from 250M+ research sources.