[ABHAYARATNA, J., ANDREWS, L., NUCH, H., PODHURY, T. (2008) Part-time Employment: The Australian Experience. Productivity Commission Staff Working Paper, June, Melbourne.10.2139/ssrn.1159594]Search in Google Scholar
[ALLAART, P., BELLMANN, L. (2007) Reasons for Part-time Work: An Empirical Analysis for Germany and the Netherlands. International Journal of Manpower, 28(7): 557-570.10.1108/01437720710830052]Search in Google Scholar
[BLANK, R. M. (1990) Are part-time jobs bad jobs? In: Burtless G. (ed.) A future of lousy jobs. Brookings Institute, Washington, DC]Search in Google Scholar
[BLANK, R. M. (1994) The dynamics of part-time work. NBER Working Paper, No.4911.10.3386/w4911]Search in Google Scholar
[BOOTH, A.L., van OURS, J.C. (2010) Part-time Jobs: What Women Want? IZA Discussion Paper 4686, IZA, Bonn.10.2139/ssrn.1534612]Search in Google Scholar
[BRENDER, A., GALLO, L. (2008) The Response of Voluntary and Involuntary Female Part-time Workers to Changes in Labor-Market Conditions. Bank of Israel Research Department Discussion Paper, No. 2008.08.10.2139/ssrn.1264582]Search in Google Scholar
[BUDDELMEYER, H., MOURRE, G., WARD, M. (2004) Recent Developments in Part-time Work in EU-15 Countries: Trends and Policy. IZA DP No.1415.10.2139/ssrn.628042]Search in Google Scholar
[BUDDELMEYER, H., MOURRE, G., WARD, M. (2008) Why Do Europeans Work Part-time? A Cross-country Panel Analysis. European Central Bank Working Paper, No. 872, Frankfurt-am-Main.]Search in Google Scholar
[DARBY, J., HART, R., VECCHI, M. (2001) Labour Force Participation and Business Cycle Fluctuations: A Comparative Analysis of Europe, Japan and the United States. Japan and the World Economy, 13: 113-133. DOI: 10.1016/S0922-1425(00)00049-910.1016/S0922-1425(00)00049-9]Search in Google Scholar
[DELSEN, L. (1998) When do men work part-time? in Part-time prospects: an international comparison of part-time work in Europe, North America and the Pacific Rim. Jacqueline O’Reilly and Colette Fagan editors. Routledge. London and New York.]Search in Google Scholar
[EICHHORST, W., MARX, P. (eds.) (2015), Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets: An Occupational Perspective. Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham.10.4337/9781781001721]Search in Google Scholar
[EUROFOUND (2007) Part-time Work in European Companies. European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions, Dublin.]Search in Google Scholar
[EUROFOUND (2011) Part-time Work in Europe – European Company Survey 2009. European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions, Dublin.]Search in Google Scholar
[EUWALS, R., HOGERBRUGGE, M. (2006) Explaining the Growth of Part-time Employment: Factors of Supply and Demand. Labour, 20(3): 533-557. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9914.2006.00352.x10.1111/j.1467-9914.2006.00352.x]Search in Google Scholar
[FAGAN, C., PLANTINGA, J., RUBERY, J. (1995) Does Part-time Work Promote Sex Equality? A Comparative Analysis of the Netherlands and the UK. Discussion Paper FS I 95-203. Berlin: Social Science Research Centre Berlin.]Search in Google Scholar
[FAGAN, C., O’REILLY, J. (1998) Conceptualising part-time work - The value of an integrated comparative perspective. in Part-time prospects: an international comparison of part-time work in Europe, North America and the Pacific Rim. Jacqueline O’Reilly and Colette Fagan editors. Routledge. London and New York.10.4324/9780203276105]Search in Google Scholar
[FIALOVÁ, K. (2017) Why don’t Eastern Europeans Work Part-time? Ekonomický časopis, 65(2): 125-142.]Search in Google Scholar
[FIALOVÁ, K. (2016) Práce na částečný úvazek v evropských zemích. in Práce, hodnoty a blahobyt: české reálie v evropském kontextu. Jiří Večerník editor. Sociologický ústav AV ČR. Praha. pp. 42-65.]Search in Google Scholar
[GARIBALDI, P., MAURO, P. (2002) Anatomy of employment growth. Economic Policy, 17(34): 67-113. DOI: 10.1111/1468-0327.0008410.1111/1468-0327.00084]Search in Google Scholar
[KJELDSTAD, R., NYMOEN, E.H. (2012): Underemployment in a gender-segregated labour market. Economic and Industrial Democracy, 33(2): 207-224.10.1177/0143831X11402238]Search in Google Scholar
[LAYARD, R., BARTON, M., ZABALZA, A. (1980) Married women's participation and hours. Economica, 47(185): 51-72. DOI: 10.2307/255316710.2307/2553167]Search in Google Scholar
[LESTER, A. (1999) Labour demand and the economic cycle. Reserve Bank of Australia Bulletin.]Search in Google Scholar
[MOURRE, G. (2006) Did the pattern of aggregate employment growth change in the euro area in the late 1990s? Applied Economics, 38(15): 1783–1807. DOI: 10.1080/0003684050042707210.1080/00036840500427072]Search in Google Scholar
[OECD (1999) Focus on Part-time work. Employment Outlook. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Paris.]Search in Google Scholar
[OECD (2010) How Good is Part-time Work? In: OECD Employment Outlook 2010: Moving beyond the Jobs Crisis. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Paris., pp. 211-266.]Search in Google Scholar
[PARTRIDGE, M. (2003) Part-time Workers and Economic Expansion: Comparing the 1980s and 1990s with US State Data. Papers in Regional Science, 82(1): 51-73. DOI: 10.1007/s10110020012010.1007/s101100200120]Search in Google Scholar
[RATTI, R.A. (1991) Involuntary part-time employment: Cyclical behavior and trends over 1968–1987. Economics Letters, 35: 461–464. DOI: 10.1016/0165-1765(91)90020-L10.1016/0165-1765(91)90020-L]Search in Google Scholar
[TILLY, Ch. (1991) Reasons for the continuing growth of the part-time employment. Monthly Labor Review, 114(3): 10-18.]Search in Google Scholar
[WOLF, E. (2002) Lower wage rates for fewer hours? A simultaneous wage-hours model for Germany. Labour Economics, 9(5): 643-663. DOI: 10.1016/S0927-5371(02)00055-610.1016/S0927-5371(02)00055-6]Search in Google Scholar