Printer Friendly Version Of American Sociological Association: Labor Force Participation Rates for Doctorate Social and Behavioral Scientists, 1993 - 2003
http://www.asanet.org/research/stats/employment_trend_data/participation_rates93-06.cfm

Labor Force Participation Rates for Doctorate Social and Behavioral Scientists, 1993 - 2006



Graph: Labor Force Participation Rates for Doctorate Social & Behavioral Scientists, 1993 - 2006

Notes: Labor force is defined as those employed plus those unemployed and seeking work. The labor force participation rate is the ratio of the labor force to the population.


Summary:

The labor force participation rates for behavioral and social science PhDs dropped between 1993 and 2001. The highest drop was for sociologists. This is likely because of increased retirements for all these fields. Sociology PhDs, however, enjoyed a modest 1 percent increase in labor force participation in 2006, the strongest gain among these fields.


Related charts:


Source: 

ASA Computations Based on National Science Foundation, Science Resource Statistics, Characteristics of Doctoral Scientists and Engineers in the United States (Arlington, VA: NSF,  1996-2006).  Retrieved from http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/nsf09317/content.cfm?pub_id=3920&id=2 (November 12, 2009).


Excel icon Data:  A tabular version of this data in Excel format is available here.