pre-1995
1995-1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Mi-young An. Time Use and Gender Inequality in Korea: Differences in Paid, Unpaid and Non-productive Activities. Asian Women 24(3): 1-23.
Rania Antonopoulos. The Unpaid Care Work–Paid Work Connection. Working Paper 541 of the Levy Institute of Economics, Institute of Bard College.
Bruce Bradbury. Time and the Cost of Children. Review of Income and Wealth 54(3): 305-323.
Melissa Brown, Sandee Shulkin and Marcie Pitt-Catsouphes. Providing Working Families with an Important Resource: Time. The Sloan Work and Family Research Network Policy Briefing Series: Work-Family Information for State Legislators Issue 13
Valerie Bryson. Time-Use Studies: A Potentially Feminist Tool International Feminist Journal of Politics 10(2): 135-53. The Levy Economics Institute, Working Paper 536
Ana Rute Cardoso, Elsa Fontainha and Chiara Monfardini. Children and Parents Time Use: Empirical Evidence on Investment in Human Capital in France, Italy and Germany. IZA Discussion Paper No. 3815.
Lekha S. Chakraborty. Deficient Public Infrastructure and Private Costs Evidence from a Time-use Survey for the Water Sector in India
Lyn Craig and Michael Bittman. The Incremental Time Costs of Children: An analysis of children’s impact on adult time use in Australia. Feminist Economics 14 (2): 57-85.
Lyn Craig and Pooja Sawrikar. Satisfaction with work-family balance for parents of early adolescents compared to parents of younger children. Journal of Family Studies 14: 91–106.
Lyn Craig. Valuing by Doing: Policy Options to Promote Sharing the Care. Journal of the Association of Research on Mothering (special issue on ‘Care-giving and care-work: theory and practice’) 10 (1): 45-56.
Robert Drago and Ya-Ning Lee. What Would They Do? Childcare under Parental Leave and Reduced Hours Options. Pennsylvania State University Population Research Institute Working Paper Series 08-03.
Robert Drago and Ya-Ning Lee. The Parenting of Infants: A Time Use Study. Working Paper No. 08-02 of the Penn State Population Research Institute
Lisa Drake, Elaine Duncan, Fi Sutherland, Clare Abernethy and Colette Henry. Time Perspective and Correlates of Wellbeing. Time & Society 17(1): 47-61
Muriel Egerton, Killian Mullan. Being a Pretty Good Citizen: An Analysis and Monetary Valuation of Formal and Informal Voluntary Work by Gender and Educational Attainment. The British Journal of Sociology 59(1): 145-164.
Feyzan Erkip and Guliz Mugan. The Importance of Time-Use Surveys for Social Sciences, Application Potentials and Usage Areas in Turkey. A report from Bilkent University for the Turkish Statistical Institute (TURKSTAT).
Valeria Esquivel, Debbie Budlender, Nancy Folbre and Indira Hirway. Explorations: Time-Use Surveys in the South. Feminist Economics 14(3): 107-152.
Jonathan Gershuny. Time-Use and the Comprehensive Accounting of Social and Economic Activity. Working Paper 2008-03, Department of Sociology, University of Oxford.
Graham Glen, Luther Smith, Kristin Isaacs, Thomas McCurdy, John Langstaff. A New Method of Longitudinal Diary Assembly for Human Exposure Modeling. Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology 18(3): 299-311
Ignace Glorieux, Inge Mestdag and Joeri Minnen. The Coming of the 24-hour Economy? Changing Work Schedules in Belgium Between 1966 and 1999. Time & Society 17(1): 63-83
J. G. Grzywacz, D. S. Carlson, and S. Shulkin. Schedule Flexibility and Stress: Linking Formal Flexible Arrangements and Perceived Flexibility to Employee Health Community, Work, and Family 11: 199-214
Maria Gutiérrez-Domènech (2008) "¿Cuánto Cuesta ir al Trabajo? El Coste en Tiempo y en Dinero / Time and Money, How Much Does Commuting Cost?" Documentos de Economía de “la Caixa” Number 11.
Lucas W. J. Harms. Mostly mobile - life situation and mobility in the Netherlands/Overwegend onderweg : de leefsituatie en de mobiliteit van Nederlanders. Awarded by Universiteit Utrecht, published by Sociaal en Cultureel Planbureau.
E. J. Hill, J. I. Jacob, L. L. Shannon, R. T. Brennan, V. L. Blanchard, and G. Martinengo. Exploring the Relationship of Workplace Flexibility, Gender, and Life Stage to Family-to-Work Conflict, and Stress and Burnout Community, Work and Family 11: 165-181
David Holley, Juliet Jain, and Glenn Lyons. Understanding Business Travel Time and Its Place in the Working Day. Time & Society 17(1): 27-46
Man Yee Kan. Does Gender Trump Money? Housework Hours of Husbands and Wives in Britain. Work, Employment and Society 22(1): 45-66.
Susan Kenyon Internet Use and Time Use: The Importance of Multitasking. Time and Society 2008 17(2-3): 283-318.
Alan B. Krueger and Aurthur A. Stone. Assessment of Pain: A Community-Based Diary Survey in the USA. Lancet 371: 1519–25
Fran McGinnity and Helen Russell. Gender Inequalities in Time Use: The Distribution of Caring, Housework and Employment Among Women and Men in Ireland. Dublin: The Equality Authority/ESRI
Sachiko Nakano and Yoko Watanabe. "Rapid Growth of Internet Use: from the Time Use Survey in the Internet Age" 2006. NHK Broadcasting Studies 2008(6): 175-203.
Aileen O'Carroll. Fuzzy Holes and Intangible Time: Time in a Knowledge Industry. Time and Society 2008 17(2-3): 179-193.
Sara de la Rica, Juan J. Dolado and Cecilia García-Peñalosa. On Gender Gaps and Self-fulfilling Expectations: Theory, Policies and Some Empirical Evidence. IZA Discussion Paper No. 3553.
Naresh Chandra Sourabh. The Culture of Women's Housework: A Case Study of Bihar, India. University of Helsinki, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Sociology.
Glenn J. Stalker. Measuring Diversity in Daily Social Contact: The Contribution of Social Context, Work and Leisure on the Opportunity for Engagement. Social Indicators Research 86(2): 275-295
Oriel Sullivan. Busyness, Status Distinction and Consumption Strategies of the Income Rich, Time Poor. Time & Society 17(1): 5-26
Catrine Tudor-Locke and Sandra A. Ham. Walking Behaviors Reported in the American Time Use Survey 2003–2005. Journal of Physical Activity and Health 5(5): 633–647.
Catrine Tudor-Locke, Tracy L. Washington, Barbara E. Ainsworth and Richard P. Troiano. Linking the American Time Use Survey (ATUS) and the Compendium of Physical Activities: Methods and Rationale. Journal of Physical Activity and Health 5.
Susan Venn, Sara Arber, Robert Meadows and Jenny Hislop. The Fourth Shift: Exploring the Gendered Nature of Sleep Disruption Among Couples with Children. The British Journal of Sociology 59(1): 79-97.
Judy Wajcman. Life in the Fast Lane? Towards a Sociology of Technology and Time. The British Journal of Sociology 59(1): 59-77.
Emilio Zagheni, Francesco C. Billari, Piero Manfredi, Alessia Melegaro, Joel Mossong, W. John Edmunds. Using Time-Use Data to Parameterize Models for the Spread of Close-Contact Infectious Diseases. American Journal of Epidemiology