This is a book for policy makers, academics and students alike. The immense scope and depth of the research contained in this book provides valuable contributions and opens up important new policy avenues and research agendas capable of pushing theoretical developments forward.
Work, Employment and Society
Across the developed world, most of us who work now earn our living in the service sector. However, the issue of what kind of service economy is sustainable and desirable, both in economic and social terms, is rarely debated.
This book argues that this needs to change. National governments have emphasised the role of skills in achieving international competitiveness, higher living standards, and social inclusion. However, even prior to the 2008 financial crisis, problems of over-qualification, skills wastage, and poor job quality were becoming difficult to ignore. This raises important questions about what kind of service sector jobs will be on offer to meet the aspirations of an increasingly qualified workforce and what role can governments play in raising the skills required in jobs and the quality of jobs and services? Work organisation and job design are key factors shaping the skill content of work and the opportunities workers have to deploy their skills and capabilities.
Through cross-national comparative research, this book examines whether and why service sector jobs vary across countries. Drawing upon detailed empirical research, the jobs of vocational teacher, fitness instructor, and café worker in the UK, Norway, and France are compared, allowing an exploration of the role of national institutions, sectors, and organisations in shaping work organisation and job quality. The findings contribute to the comparative study of work organisation, the relationship between skills and performance, the role and purpose of education and the prospects for better jobs in 'the age of over-qualification'.
Les mer
We live in an age when the workforce is more educated and qualified than ever before. There is mounting evidence that many workers are over-qualified and their skills and capabilities are not being used effectively at work. This book poses an important question: what can be done to raise the skill content of jobs in an 'Age of Over-qualification'?
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1: Skills, Jobs and Services: A Challenge for Europe in the Age of Over-qualification
2: Work and Skills in Contemporary Capitalism
3: National Institutions, Sectors and Work Organisation: A Theoretical Framework
4: Industrial Relations, Skill Formation Systems and Workplace Development: Continuity and Change in the UK, Norway and France
5: Professional Work, Autonomy and Performance: Vocational Teachers
6: Regulating the Middle: Fitness Instructors
7: Raising the Bottom: Café Workers
8: Towards Better Jobs: Possibilities and Prospects in the Age of Over-qualification
Les mer
This is a book for policy makers, academics and students alike. The immense scope and depth of the research contained in this book provides valuable contributions and opens up important new policy avenues and research agendas capable of pushing theoretical developments forward.
Les mer
Comparative case studies compare sectors and jobs across countries
Accessible writing style
Clear presentation of evidence and data
Inter-disciplinary in appeal
Caroline Lloyd is Professor at the School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University and an Associate Fellow at the centre on Skills, Knowledge and Organisational Performance. Her research focuses on the relationships between product markets, labour markets, work organisation and skills. She has published widely on issues related to the political economy of skill and the causes and consequences of low wage work, including co-editing Low-Wage Work in the United
Kingdom (Russell Sage Foundation). Current research interests include international comparisons of skill and work organisation; job quality; industrial policy and skill utilisation. Jonathan Payne is Reader in
Employment Studies in the Department of Human Resource Management at Leicester Business School, De Montfort University, and a member of the research group on Contemporary Research on Organisations, Work and Employment (CROWE). Prior to this, he was a researcher with the Economic and Social Research Council's centre on Skills, Knowledge and Organisational Performance (SKOPE). His research interests and publications encompass the political economy of skill, vocational education and training
policy, the changing meaning of 'skill', workplace innovation, and international comparative studies of work organisation and job quality.
Les mer
Comparative case studies compare sectors and jobs across countries
Accessible writing style
Clear presentation of evidence and data
Inter-disciplinary in appeal
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199672356
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
554 gr
Høyde
239 mm
Bredde
162 mm
Dybde
21 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
276