Citation: Mh. Vickers, The "invisibly" chronically ill as unexamined organizational fringe-dwellers: Voices of ambiguity, confusion, and uncertainty, RES SOC WOR, 9, 2000, pp. 3-21
Citation: L. Lobao et K. Meyer, Institutional sources of marginality: Midwestern family farming in a period of economic decline, RES SOC WOR, 9, 2000, pp. 23-49
Citation: Mj. Pfeffer, Class, ethnicity, and marginal employment: African-American and Cambodian day-haul farm workers in Philadelphia, RES SOC WOR, 9, 2000, pp. 73-93
Citation: Dn. Pellow, African-American labor at the margins: Exploring the emergence of environmental health hazards in the workplace, RES SOC WOR, 9, 2000, pp. 95-114
Citation: E. Rodriguez, Understanding the predictors of part-time versus full-time employment: Social benefits and the life-cycle, RES SOC WOR, 9, 2000, pp. 165-185
Citation: R. Russell et R. Hanneman, The use of part-time employees and independent contractors among small enterprises in Russia, RES SOC WOR, 9, 2000, pp. 187-208
Citation: Kl. Pereles, Are traditional and adjunct faculty members really different? Comparing Organizational and Professional Commitment, RES SOC WOR, 9, 2000, pp. 271-289
Authors:
von Hippel, C
Greenberger, DB
Heneman, RL
Mangum, SL
Skoglind, JD
Citation: C. Von Hippel et al., Voluntary and involuntary temporary employees: Predicting satisfaction, commitment, and personal control, RES SOC WOR, 9, 2000, pp. 291-309