2014
Sexual orientation, prejudice, and segregation
Publication
Publication
Journal of Labor Economics , Volume 32 - Issue 1 p. 123- 159
This article examines whether gay and lesbian workers sort into tolerant occupations. With information on sexual orientation, prejudice, and occupational choice taken fromAustralian Twin Registers, we find that gays and lesbians shy away from prejudiced occupations. We show that our segregation results are largely driven by those gay and lesbian workers with disclosed identities and are robust to the inclusion of unobserved factors that are inherited and observed factors that strongly correlate with productive skills and vocational preferences.Our segregationestimates are consistent with prejudice-based theories of employer and employee discrimination against gay and lesbian workers.
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doi.org/10.1086/673315, hdl.handle.net/1765/76569 | |
Journal of Labor Economics | |
Organisation | Erasmus School of Economics |
Plug, E., Webbink, D., & Martin, N. (2014). Sexual orientation, prejudice, and segregation. Journal of Labor Economics, 32(1), 123–159. doi:10.1086/673315 |