The World Bank Working for a World Free of Poverty Microdata Library
  • Data Catalog
  • Collections
  • Citations
  • Terms of use
  • About
  • Login
    Login
    Home / Central Data Catalog / DATAFIRST / ZAF_2000_TUS_V01_M
datafirst

Time Use Survey 2000

South Africa, 2000
Get Microdata
Reference ID
ZAF_2000_TUS_v01_M
Producer(s)
Statistics South Africa
Collection(s)
DataFirst , University of Cape Town, South Africa
Metadata
Documentation in PDF DDI/XML JSON
Study website
Created on
Jan 27, 2012
Last modified
May 01, 2014
Page views
28532
Downloads
2729
  • Study Description
  • Data Description
  • Documentation
  • Get Microdata
  • Related citations

Related publications

The data from this study are used in the following publications:
Found: 32
Sort by: Author Date Title
1 United Nations Economic and Social Council: Economic Commission for Africa; African Centre for Gender and Development (ACGD) . "A guidebook for mainstreaming gender perspectives and household production into national statistics, budgets and policies in Africa." 2004.
2 Antonopoulos, Rania, and Emel Memis. "Time and poverty from a developing country perspective." (2010).
3 Apps, Patricia, and World Bank, Poverty Reduction and Economic Management, Gender Division. "Gender, time use and models of the household." IZA Discussion Paper No 796, World Bank Policy Research Paper No 3233 (2004).
4 Barnes, Helen, Michael Noble, Chris Dibben, Charles Meth, Gemma Wright, and Lucie Cluver. "South Africa microdata scoping study." Centre for the Analysis of South African Social Policy, University of Oxford, Working Paper no. 6 , no. 6 (2007).
5 Bray, Rachel. "Who does the housework? An examination of South African children's working roles." Social Dynamics 29, no. 2 (2003): 95-131.
6 Bray, Rachel. "Who does the housework? An examination of South African children's working roles." Social Dynamics 29, no. 2 (2003): 95-131.
7 Budlender, Debbie. "The policy implications of time use surveys: Lessons from South Africa." (0).
8 Budlender, Debbie. Why should we care about unpaid care work?. Harare, Zimbabwe: UNIFEM, Regional Office for Southern Africa and the Indian Ocean States, 2004.
9 Budlender, Debbie. Women and men in South Africa: Five years on. Pretoria, South Africa: Statistics South Africa, 2002.
10 Budlender, Debbie. Time use studies and unpaid care work. Routledge/UNRISD research in gender and develth ed. Vol. 7. : Taylor & Francis, 2010.
11 Budlender, Debbie, and Dawie Bosch. South Africa child domestic workers: A national report. Geneva: International Labour Organization and International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC), 2002.
12 Budlender, Debbie, and Ann Brathaug. "Calculating the value of unpaid labour: A discussion document." Statistics South Africa , no. 2002/1 (2002).
13 Budlender, Debbie, and Francie Lund. "South Africa: A Legacy of Family Disruption." Development and Change 42, no. 4 (2011): 925-946.
14 Chobokoane, Ntebaleng, and Debbie Budlender. "Activities over time: Further analysis of the time use survey." Occasional Paper: Statistics South Africa (2002).
15 Chobokoane, Ntebaleng, and Debbie Budlender. A day in the life of a South African teenager. Pretoria, South Africa: Statistics South Africa, 2002.
16 Esquivel, Valeria, Debbie Budlender, Nancy Folbre, and Indira Hirway. "Explorations: Time-use surveys in the south." Feminist Economics 14, no. 3 (2008): 107-152.
17 Floro, Maria S, and Hitomi Komatsu. "Gender and Work in South Africa: What Can Time-Use Data Reveal?." Feminist Economics 17, no. 4 (2011): 33-66.
18 Floro, Maria S, Imraan Valodia, and Hitomi Komatsu. "The gender dimensions of social networks, unemployment and underemployment: What time use data reveal." American University Washington DC: Department of Economics Working Paper Series, no. 2008-09 (2008).
19 Fofana, Ismael, John Cockburn, Bernard Decaluwe, Ramos Mabugu, Margaret Chitiga, Alfred Latigo, and Omar Abdourahman. "A gender-aware integrated macro-micro model for evaluating impacts of policies on poverty reduction in Africa: The case of South Africa." (2006).
20 Gross, Jocelyn, and Barbara Swirski. Time use surveys and gender equality. 2002.
21 Kizilirmak, Burca, and Emel Memis. "The unequal burden of poverty on time use." (2009).
22 Manga, Janeesh, and Martin Wittenberg. "Capacities and constraints on activities: Analysing the demand for variety in South Africa." School of Economics and SALDRU, University of Cape town (2007).
23 Miranda, Veerle. "Cooking, caring and volunteering: Unpaid work around the world." OECD Publishing - DIRECTORATE FOR EMPLOYMENT, LABOUR AND SOCIAL AFFAIRS OECD Working Papers, no. 116 (2011).
24 Mitik, Lulit, and Bernard Decaluwé. "Market labor, household work and schooling in South Africa: Modeling the effects of trade on adults’ and children’s time allocation." (2009).
25 Moses, Susan. "How space and place matters? Perspectives from Girls Growing up in a Cape Town Neighbourhood created under Apartheid." CSSR Working Paper , no. 136 (2005).
26 Rama, Sharmla, and Linda M Richter. Children's household work as a contribution to the well-being of the family and household. 2006.
27 United Nations Statistical Division,. Guide to producing statistics on time use: Measuring paid and unpaid work. New York, United States: United Nations, 2005.
28 Wittenberg, Martin. "How young South Africans spend their time." Society and Leisure-Montreal 28, no. 2 (2005).
29 Wittenberg, Martin. "Testing for a common latent variable in a linear regression: Or how to “fix” a bad variable by adding multiple proxies for it." SALDRU/CSSR Working Papers , no. 132 (2005).
30 Wittenberg, Martin. "Lazy rotten sons? Relatedness, gender and the intra-household allocation of work and leisure in South Africa." Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit , no. 28 (2009).
31 Wittenberg, Martin. "The school day in South Africa." SALDRU/CSSR Working Papers , no. 113 (2005).
32 Wittenberg, Martin. "The intra-household allocation of work and leisure in South Africa." Social Indicators Research 93, no. 1 (2009): 159-164.
Back to Catalog
The World Bank Working for a World Free of Poverty
  • IBRD IDA IFC MIGA ICSID

© The World Bank Group, All Rights Reserved.

This site uses cookies to optimize functionality and give you the best possible experience. If you continue to navigate this website beyond this page, cookies will be placed on your browser. To learn more about cookies, click here.