| Literature DB >> 31577824 |
Sean Waite1, John Ecker2, Lori E Ross3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The last two decades have witnessed a considerable growth in the literature focusing on LGBTQ2S+ employment, labour market inequality, and income. During the same period, Canada has emerged as a trailblazer in employment protections for both sexual and gender minorities. Unfortunately, the Canadian literature on LGBTQ2S+ employment outcomes and experiences is disperse and underdeveloped.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31577824 PMCID: PMC6774499 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223372
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Search strategy flowchart.
Articles included in the systematic review and thematic synthesis.
| Author(s): | Title: | Journal / Publication: |
|---|---|---|
| Adam (1981) [ | Stigma and Employability: Discrimination by Sex and Sexual Orientation in the Ontario Legal Profession | The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology |
| Adam and Rangel (2015) [ | The post-migration sexual citizenship of Latino gay men in Canada | Citizenship Studies |
| Allen (2015) [ | Household Production and Sexual Orientation | Economic Inquiry |
| Bauer and Scheim (2015) [ | Transgender People in Ontario, Canada: Statistics from the Trans PULSE Project to Inform Human Rights Policy | Report |
| Bowring and Brewis (2009) [ | Truth and consequences: Managing lesbian and gay identity in the Canadian workplace | Equal Opportunities International |
| Brennan et.al. (2013) [ | Socio-demographic profile of older adults with HIV/AIDS: gender and sexual orientation differences. | Canadian Journal on Aging |
| Brown (1998) [ | Sexual Orientation and Labor Economics | Feminist Economics |
| Card et.al. (2018) [ | A latent class analysis of substance use and culture among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men. | Culture, health & sexuality |
| Carpenter (2008) [ | Sexual Orientation, Work, and Income in Canada | Canadian Journal of Economics |
| Cerf (2016) [ | Sexual orientation, income, and stress at work. | Industrial Relations |
| Cotter (2016) [ | Sexual Misconduct in the Canadian Armed Forces, 2016 | Statistics Canada |
| Couto (2014) [ | Covered in Blue: Police Culture and LGBT Police Officers in the Province of Ontario | MA Thesis, Royal Roads University |
| Denier and Waite (2017) [ | Sexual Orientation Wage Gaps across Local Labour Market Contexts: Evidence from Canada | Industrial Relations |
| Denier and Waite (2016) [ | Data and Discrimination: A research note on sexual orientation in the Canadian labour market | Canadian Studies in Population |
| Dilmaghani (2018) [ | Sexual Orientation, Labour Earnings, and Household Income in Canada | Journal of Labour Research |
| Dilmaghani (2018) [ | Sexual orientation, labour supply and occupational sorting in Canada | Industrial Relations Journal |
| Ferlatte et.al. (2018) [ | An Application of Syndemic Theory to Identify Drivers of the Syphilis Epidemic Among Gay, Bisexual, and Other Men Who Have Sex With Men. | Sexually transmitted diseases |
| Fournier (2005) [ | Homosexuality in the Army and Police: Progress Achieved and Experiments Lived by Gay Soldiers, Police Officers, and Gay Police According to their Own Point of View (English translation) | Dissertation Abstracts International |
| Harris (2013) [ | Essays in Applied Econometrics | Dissertation Abstracts International |
| Lafrance, Warman and Woolley (2009) [ | Sexual identity and the marriage premium | Queen’s Economics Department Working Paper |
| Lewis (2012) [ | Remapping disclosure: gay men's segmented journeys of moving out and coming out | Social & Cultural Geography |
| Lewis and Mills (2016) [ | Seeking Security: Gay Labour Migration and Uneven Landscapes of Work | Environment and Planning A |
| Macdonnell and Grigorovich (2012) [ | Gender, work, and health for trans health providers: a focus on transmen. | ISRN nursing |
| Mallon (2001) [ | Oh, Canada: The experience of working-class gay men in Toronto. | Journal of Gay & Lesbian Social Services |
| Mueller (2014) [ | Wage differentials of males and females in same-sex and different-sex couples in Canada, 2006–2010 | Canadian Studies in Population |
| Nazaretian (2014) [ | Social status, opportunity and repeat victimization: The unequal distribution of safety. | Dissertation Abstracts International |
| Ross et.al. (2018) [ | In spite of the system: A qualitatively-driven mixed methods analysis of the mental health services experiences of LGBTQ people living in poverty in Ontario, Canada. | PLOS One |
| Waite and Denier (2015) [ | Gay pay for straight work: Mechanisms generating disadvantage. | Gender & Society |
| Waite (2015) [ | Does it get better? A quasi-cohort analysis of sexual minority wage gaps. | Social Science Research |
| Waite and Denier (2016) [ | Self-employment among same-sex and opposite-sex couples in Canada. | Canadian Review of Sociology |
| Wells (2018) [ | Transgender Teachers: The Personal, Pedagogical, and Political | Journal of Homosexuality |
Canada’s LGBT data landscape.
| Self-reported sexual orientation question | Nonbinary gender option or transgender question | Couple data |
|---|---|---|
| Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS), since 2003 | Survey of Sexual Misconduct in the Canadian Armed Forces (SSMCAF), 2016 and 2018 | Census of Canada, 2001, 2006, 2016 |
| General Social Survey (GSS), since 2004 but only select years | Public Service Employee Survey (PSES), 2017 and 2018 | National Household Survey (NHS), 2011 |
| Canadian Alcohol and Drug Use Monitoring Survey (CADUMAS), since 2008 | Survey on Opioid Awareness (SOA), 2017 | Longitudinal Administrative Databank (LAD) |
| Canadian Longitudinal Study of Aging (CLSA), 2010 | ||
| Survey of Sexual Misconduct in the Canadian Armed Forces (SSMCAF) 2016 and 2018 | ||
| Canadian National Health Survey (CNHS), 2016 | ||
| Public Service Employee Survey (PSES), 2018 |
See Waite and Denier [41] A Research Note on Canada’s LGBT Data Landscape for a thorough review.
a This is not an exhaustive list. It may be possible to identify same-sex couples in other surveys or administrative data sets.
b This was a one-time survey. The data is not currently available for academic use.
Sexual minority wage gaps in Canada, self-reported sexual orientation.
| Author (year) | Data | Dependent variable | LGBTQ2+ groups | Sample specifications | Gay | Lesbian | Bisexual men | Bisexual women |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carpenter (2008) [ | CCHS (2003 & 2005) | Annual income | Gay men and lesbian women | Ages 18 to 55 | -0.115 | 0.154 | Less likely to be working full-time and incomes less than heterosexual men (footnotes 17 & 18). | Less likely to be working full-time and incomes less than heterosexual women (footnotes 17 & 18). |
| Cerf (2016) [ | CCHS (2003–2009) | Hourly income: annual income divided by 50 x hours worked/week | Gay men, lesbian women | Ages 18–65, Canadian born, | -0.090 n/s | 0.027 n/s | N/A | N/A |
| Dilmaghani (2018) [ | CADUMS (2008–2012) | Annual personal and household income (categorical) | Gay men, lesbian women | Full-time | 0.045 n/s | 0.116 | N/A | N/A |
| LaFrance, Warman, and Wooley (2009) [ | CCHS (2003–2007) | Annual income | Gay men, bisexual men, lesbian women, bisexual women | Ages 25 to 59, working 30+/per week | -0.258 | 0.048 n/s (single only) | -349 | -0.036 n/s |
Notes:
*p< 0.05
**p< 0.01
***p< 0.001.
†No data on transgender, queer, two-spirited etc. individuals.
Sexual minority wage gaps in Canada, couple data.
| Author (year) | Data | Dependent variable | LGBTQ2+ groups | Sample specifications | Coupled gay men | Coupled lesbian women |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brown (1998) [ | Census (1991) | Annual employment income | Non-relatives of the same-sec residing together, i.e. coupled gay men and coupled lesbians | Ages 45 to 64; full-time; full-year | 30.2% less than married heterosexual men (aged 45 to 54) | 23.1% more than married heterosexual women (aged 45 to 54) |
| Denier and Waite (2016) [ | Census (2006) | Annual earnings (continuous & categorical); annual income (continuous & categorical); hourly earnings (continuous & categorical); hourly income (continuous and categorical) | Married / cohabiting gay men and lesbians | The authors replicate sample specifications in Mueller (2014) and Waite and Denier (2015). This paper attempts to reconcile the differences in point estimates from the GSS and Census data | Between -0.126 | Between 0.095 |
| Denier and Waite (2017) [ | Census (2006) | Annual wages and salaries | Married / cohabiting gay men and lesbians | Ages 25 to 64, annual earnings $1000+ | -0.077 | Note: ref = coupled heterosexual men |
| Mueller (2014) [ | GSS (2006–2010) | Hourly income: | Married / cohabiting gay men and lesbians | Ages 20–60, not attending school full-time, between $5 and $500/hr and claimed employment or self employment income if main source of income | -0.060 n/s | 0.163 |
| Waite and Denier (2015) [ | Census (2006) | Annual wages and salaries | Married / cohabiting gay men and lesbians | Ages 25–64, Canadian born, non-Aboriginal, non-visible minority, annual earnings $1000+, working for wages and salaries | -0.051 | 0.079 |
| Waite and Denier (2016) [ | Census (2001, 2006) & National Household Survey (2011) | Annual wages and salaries | Married / cohabiting gay men and lesbians | Ages 25 to 64, Canadian born, non-aboriginal, excluding self-employed farmers, annual wages and salaries | -0.066 | 0.066 |
| Waite (2015) [ | Census (2001, 2006) & National Household Survey (2011) | Weekly wages and salaries: annual wages and salaries / total weeks worked | Married / cohabiting gay men and lesbians | Ages 25–64, Canadian born, non-Aboriginal, non-visible minority, annual earnings $1000+, working for wages and salaries | -0.057 | 0.052 |
Notes:
*p< 0.05
**p< 0.01
***p< 0.001.
†No data on bisexual, transgender, queer, two-spirited etc. individuals.
+ The confidential GSS data includes a direct question on sexual orientation.
Mueller [34] used public use GSS data, which only includes information on coupled gay men and lesbians