pre-1995
1995-1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
Paul Callister and Sylvia Dixon. New Zealanders' Working Time and Home Work Patterns: Evidence from the New Zealand time use survey. New Zealand Department of Labour Occasional Paper Series 2001/5
Manfred Ehling and Joachim Merz. Zeitbudget in Deutschland. Erfahrungsberichte der Wissenschaft (about scientists' experience concerning the 1991/92 German TUS). Spektrum Bundesstatistik, Bd. 17
Maria Sagario Floro and Marjorie Miles. Time Use and Overlapping Activities: Evidence from Australia. SPRC Discussion Paper 112
Jonathan Gershuny. Cross-national Changes in Time Use: Some Sociological (Hi)stories Re-examined. British Journal of Sociology 52(2): 331-348
Ragni Hege Kitterød. Does the Recording of Parallel Activities in Time Use Diaries Affect the Way People Report Their Main Activities?. Social Indicators Research 56(2): 145-178
Indira Hirway. Understanding Children's Work in India: An analysis of their time use. Paper presented at a Consultative Workshop on Food Insecurity and Child Work in Rural India (15-17 March). Jointly organised by World Food Programme and Institute of Human Development
Chang-Hyeon Joh, Theo A Arentze, Harry J P Timmermans. A Position-Sensitive Sequence-Alignment Method Illustrated For Space - Time Activity-Diary Data. Environment and Planning A 33(2): 313–338
Leslie A. Perlow. Time to Coordinate. Work and Occupations 28(1): 91-111
Dale Southerton, Elizabeth Shove and Alan Warde. Harried and Hurried: Time shortage and the co-ordination of everyday life. CRIC Discussion Paper 47
Oriel Sullivan and Jonathan Gershuny. Cross National Changes in Time Use: Some Sociolgical (Hi)stories Re-examined. British Journal of Sociology 52(2): 331-47. Formerly Institute for Social and Economic Research, Working Paper 2001-1. Colchester: University of Essex