I grew up in a single-parent home with my mother who, by default, was (and remains) the breadwinner. She went on to date and marry, and in every relationship, she brought home the bacon and fried it ...
In an increasing number of American households, the role of primary breadwinner is going to the female partner. Men still bear that title in a majority of marriages, according to the Pew Research ...
Washington, D.C. — A new analysis by the Center for American Progress finds that in 2015, nearly two-thirds—64.4 percent—of mothers were primary, sole, or co-breadwinners for their families. This ...
I’m not gonna lie. I love it when single moms get attention. Whether I spot a sister-in-arms at the playground, read about us in The New York Times, or see one as the heroine of a Hollywood movie, I ...
Farnoosh Torabi pulls in more dough than her husband, Tim Dussinger. Her new book, “When She Makes More,” navigates the pitfalls. Tamara Beckwith “I have a Chanel bag fetish,” admits Stella (not her ...
It’s a generational shift that’s been a long time coming. For a brief chapter in the history of gender relations—what’s rightly been called the Leave it to Beaver era—dapper, chipper men provided for ...
As the terribly boring and reductive "Can women have it all?" debate lurches on, a new report shows that more women than ever are proving that yes, women can in fact work and have a family. According ...
Good morning! Columbia gives in to Trump's demands to recover federal funding, women's college basketball could still be undervalued, and Fortune reporter Beth Greenfield examines what happens when ...
In a report released yesterday, The Center for American Progress found that in 2015 42 percent of working mothers were the sole or primary breadwinner in their families, meaning that they were ...