Diversity and Decomposition in the Labour Market Routledge Library Editions: British Sociological Association Series
Coordonnateurs : Robbins David, Caldwell Lesley, Day Graham, Jones Karen, Rose Hilary
Originally published in 1982 Diversity and Decomposition in the Labour Market, is an edited collection addressing the contemporary sociology of the labour market. The collection focuses on the categorisation of the diverse dualities that might be thought to characterise certain labour markets. The collection addresses many economic sectors, and there is a distinct focus on labour market analyses developed within neo-classical and radical economics in the USA. The analyses maintain that the labour market is in some sense dualistic.
Acknowledgements 1. Introduction: Diversity and Decomposition in the Labour Market 2. Labour in the Woollen and Worsted Industry: A Critical Analysis of Dual Labour Market Theory 3. Patterns of Disadvantage in a City Labour Market 4. Women in the Local Labour Market: A Case with Particular Reference to the Retail Trades in Britain 1900-1930 5. ‘The Contested Terrain’: A Critique of R.C. Edwards’ Theory of Working Class Fractions and Politics 6. ‘Fraternalism’ and ‘Paternalism’ as Employer Strategies in Small Firms 7. Clerical ‘Proletariansation’: Myth or Reality 8. Class Relations and Uneven Development in Wales 9. Technocratic Ideology and the Reproduction of Inequality: The Case of the Electronics Industry in the Republic of Ireland
Date de parution : 05-2020
13.8x21.6 cm
Date de parution : 05-2018
13.8x21.6 cm
Thèmes de Diversity and Decomposition in the Labour Market :
Mots-clés :
Brighton Labour Process Group; Dual Labour Market; Diversity; Skilled Manual Work; Decomposition; Non-manual Labour; Labour Market; Younger Men; Industry; Dual Labour Market Theory; Women; Capital Labour Relation; Local Labour Market; Vice Versa; Retail Trade; Class Relationships; Clerical Proletarianisation; Politics; Worsted Industry; Fraternalism; Recurrent Unemployment; Paternalism; Dual Labour Market Model; Employer; Direct Production Workers; Strategies; Nonskilled Manual Work; Proletarianisation; Employment Disadvantage; Class Relations; Education System; Wales; Women’s Wage Labour; Ideology; Small Employers; Reproduction; Working Class Fractions; Inequality; Male Mobility; Social Inequality; Semiskilled Manual Work; Graham Day; Female Shop Assistants; Lesley Caldwell; Low Skill Industry; Karen Jones; Small Scale Employers; Hilary Rose; Glenn Morgan; David Hooper; Jim Cousins; Margaret Curran; Diana J; Smith; Roger Penn; Robert Goffee; Richard Scase; Rosemary Crompton; Gareth Jones; Philip Cooke; Peter Murray; James Wickham