Labour / income economics Books
Cornell University Press What Workers Say
Book SynopsisThis book brings together research in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand to answer a series of key questions...Trade ReviewWhat Workers Say examines the voice that employees have, and want, in the workplace and the role played by unions, employers, and governments in expanding, or restricting, that voice. The authors are interested in assessing and comparing what forms of employee voice are able to meet the needs and wants of workers in six nations: Australia, Britain, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, and the United States. * Work and Occupations *Freeman, Boxall, and Haynes provide the results of comprehensive on employee voice and the implications of their findings for labor unions in six countries.... Of the countries studied, the US has the most rigid, outmoded form of employee voice. Highly recommended. -- G. E. Kaupins * Choice *
£23.74
Cornell University Press Selling Technology
Book SynopsisSelling Technology offers a look at high-tech markets from within, through the experience of salespeople, purchasing agents, and engineers who construct markets for emergent technologies through their daily engagement in sales interactions. Although...Trade Review"Asaf Darr provides us with a much-needed look at the work of sales. While sales is an important part of the service sector, it is surprisingly understudied by social scientists. Yet information about the work of sales, and service work in general, is critical in an economy where jobs increasingly move across national boundaries. Darr puts a human face (or perhaps more accurately, faces) on such work. He demonstrates that salespersons come in a wide variety of forms, and the skills they use and the settings they work in are varied. In this sense, the very word 'salesperson' obscures as much as it reveals. Selling Technology encourages us to get behind the often inadequate labels of jobs in the information economy in order to ask, What is this work really about? Yet Darr's book is of more than academic importance, for it reminds us that preparing ourselves and other people for future worlds of work is best grounded in a firm understanding of how work is accomplished today. It is thus essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the growing worldwide importance of service work." -- Charles Darrah, San Jose State University
£22.79
Cornell University Press The Complexities of Care
Book Synopsis"Nursing, everyone believes, is the caring profession. Texts on caring line the walls of nursing schools and student shelves. Indeed, the discipline of nursing is often known as the 'caring science.' Because of their caring reputation, nurses top the...Trade ReviewThis collection of essays... shows that nurses in all settings tend to describe their work as caring, emotional, and compassionate, consciously avoiding mention of the knowledge and skill that are equally essential to the job.... The consequences... include early burnout owing to mistaken expectations and the greater use of unskilled workers, who are seen as equally capable of providing emotional care.... Well written and provocative. * Library Journal *Table of ContentsIntroduction - Sioban Nelson and Suzanne Gordon1. Moving beyond the Virtue Script in Nursing: Creating a Knowledge-Based Identity for Nurses - Suzanne Gordon and Sioban Nelson2. When Little Things Are Big Things: The Importance of Relationships for Nurses' Professional Practice - Dana Beth Weinberg3. Pride and Prejudice: Nurses' Struggle with Reasoned Debate - Diana J. Mason4. Moral Integrity and Regret in Nursing - Lydia L. Moland5. Ethical Expertise and the Problem of the Good Nurse - Sioban Nelson6. From Sickness to Health - Tom Keighley7. The New Cartesianism: Dividing Mind and Body and Thus Disembodying Care - Suzanne Gordon8. Nurses Must Be Clever to Care - Sanchia Aranda and Rosie Brown9. "You Don't Want to Stay Here": Surgical Nursing and the Disappearance of Patient Recovery Time - Marie Heartfield10. Research on Nurse Staffing and Its Outcomes: The Challenges and Risks of Grasping at Shadows - Sean ClarkeConclusion: Nurses Wanted: Sentimental Men and Women Need Not Apply - Sioban Nelson and Suzanne GordonNotes Contributors Index
£18.99
Cornell University Press Maid to Order in Hong Kong
Book SynopsisMiddle-class Chinese women in the global city of Hong Kong have entered the workforce in unprecedented numbers over the past three decades, and the demand for foreign domestic workers has soared. A decade ago some foretold the decline in foreign workers and the influx of mainland workers. But today over 120,000 women from the Philippines, over...Trade ReviewThis ethnography is an indisputable contribution to both Asian studies and anthropology and a pioneering work in the field of transnational migration studies. I strongly recommend this lively and readable study of the complex lives of domestic workers in Hong Kong as a textbook for use in a variety of classes. * American Ethnologist *An ethnography with a twist, in that it portrays the domestic workers in their own terms, speaking for themselves through their experiences and reactions, including the strategies of resistance developed by the workers. * China Journal *Constable undertakes extensive naturalistic and participant observation.... The interviews are lively, presenting an array of experiences. * China Quarterly *Maid to Order in Hong Kong is a stimulating and compellingly written book. * American Anthropologist *The combination of analyses of the social structural forms of domination and the individual forms of resistance makes Constable's work insightful and useful. * Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society *This book contains rich qualitative data and provides sophisticated analysis of the plights, resistance, and accommodation of domestic workers. The writing is highly engaging. I strongly recommend it to students of qualitative methodology, gender and migration studies, as well as to all those who are interested in agency and contestations of women, and who care about the struggles of the disadvantaged. -- Catherine C. H. Chiu * Work and Occupations *
£19.19
MB - Cornell University Press Juki Girls Good Girls Gender and Cultural
Book SynopsisCaitrin Lynch shows how contemporary Sri Lankan women navigate a complex web of political, cultural, and socioeconomic forces. Lynch details precisely how gender, nationalism, and globalization influence everyday life in Sri Lanka.Trade ReviewAnthropologist Caitrin Lynch writes a provocative ethnography about women workers in Sri Lanka's 200 Garment Factories Program, a state initiative that brought international industry to rural villages. Working at the intersection of globalization, gender studies, and labor relations, Lynch discusses the localization of production, examining how transnational capitalist dynamics settle into local contexts. This engaging book is based on eighteen months of qualitative research performed in two garment factories. The pages brim with lively characters and trenchant analysis. * Journal of Asian Studies *In Juki Girls, Good Girls, anthropologist Caitrin Lynch powerfully displays women's ability to contest and adapt to larger social, political, and economic structures as they fashion identities that are both modern and traditional. Above all, it is about women's agency and thus challenges the victim-oriented globalization literature. Lynch illustrates how even when women enact subordinating practices, they do so on their own terms in an ongoing process of subject formation. Juki Girls is an instant classic, highly recommended to generalists, undergraduates, and graduate students for his accessibility, clarity, and significance. * Feminist Studies *In keeping with the best traditions of anthropology, Lynch connects individual experience to the politico-economic structures within which women act on and understand their worlds. Juki Girls, Good Girls is an empirically rich and theoretically informed account of gender as a site of struggle and change; few readers will be disappointed. It reminds us that women's empowerment, while a laudable development goal, is far more complicated than many of us suspect. There is much in this book that will interest development scholars as well as those in gender and feminist studies, and both seasoned and novice researchers. * Pacific Affairs *Table of ContentsIntroduction Rohini: Young Women and Garment Life 1. Globalization, Gender, and Labor Chinta 2. Localizing Production Mala: The Truth about Women Workers at Garment Factories 3. The Politics of White Women's Underwear Geeta 4. Juki Girls, Good Girls, and the Village Context Sita 5. The Good Girls of Sri Lankan Modernity Geeta: Untitled 6. Paternalism and Factory Conflicts Conclusion
£20.79
Cornell University Press The Thought of Work
Book SynopsisWhat is work? Is it simply a burden to be tolerated or something more meaningful to one''s sense of identity and self-worth? And why does it matter? In a uniquely thought-provoking book, John W. Budd presents ten historical and contemporary views of work from across the social sciences and humanities. By uncovering the diverse ways in which we conceptualize worksuch as a way to serve or care for others, a source of freedom, a source of income, a method of psychological fulfillment, or a social relation shaped by class, gender, race, and powerThe Thought of Work reveals the wide-ranging nature of work and establishes its fundamental importance for the human experience. When we work, we experience our biological, psychological, economic, and social selves. Work locates us in the world, helps us and others make sense of who we are, and determines our access to material and social resources.By integrating these distinct views, Budd replaces the usual fragmentary approachesTrade ReviewBudd does an excellent job of describing how work has utterly triumphed among us... but also confronts the issue of the deeply and widely held view that work no longer offers food for the soul and that many people's experience of paid employment is characterized by a radical loss of meaningfulness beyond its obvious and fundamental functionality. -- Paul Gilfillan * Work, Employment & Society *John W. Budd's The Thought of Work provides a much needed and highly eloquent statement of the meanings and orientations to work across time and nations. It is essential reading for students of work from senior scholars to beginning undergraduates. -- Randy Hodson, Distinguished Professor of Social and Behavioral SciencesThe Ohio State University and past editor, * American Sociological Review *This is a really useful and important book for anyone working or especially teaching in the field of employment studies.... The book can be used in a number of ways and at different levels to teach about work. It is, for example, an excellent way to introduce students to the general subject matter of economic life. Importantly, it invites the reader to think in theoretical, conceptual and at times philosophical ways about work.... Budd and his publisher are to be congratulated on producing a text that will be an invaluable resource for teachers and students of sociology, philosophy, management and business, as well as other disciplines. The book deserves to be a staple on any self-respecting critical reading list on work and employment. The Thought of Work is part of a real renaissance in the interdisciplinary study of work and is to be applauded. -- Tim Strangleman * British Journal of Industrial Relations *Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. Work as a Curse 2. Work as Freedom 3. Work as a Commodity 4. Work as Occupational Citizenship 5. Work as Disutility 6. Work as Personal Fulfillment 7. Work as a Social Relation 8. Work as Caring for Others 9. Work as Identity 10. Work as Service Conclusion: Work MattersNotes Index
£23.74
Cornell University Press Disintegrating Democracy at Work
Book SynopsisVirginia Doellgast contends that high pay and good working conditions are possible even for marginal service jobs. This outcome, however, depends on strong unions and encompassing collective bargaining institutions.Trade ReviewThrough a compelling comparative analysis of work reorganization in U.S. and German call centers following the liberalization of telecommunications markets, Doellgast shows that workplace democracy and encompassing collective bargaining institutions are central factors shaping job quality in service settings where managers encounter strong incentives to cut labor costs.... Disintegrating Democracy at Work is a mandatory read for anyone interested in understanding the relationship between national institutions, management strategies, and worker outcomes in the expanding service sector. -- Tashlin Lakhani * ILR Review *There is something for everyone to take away from this book: academics, managers, union leaders, and policy makers alike. Doellgast also leaves the reader with some hope. Convergence on poor working conditions and low pay is not the inevitable outcome for noncore service workers. Differences in national industrial relations institutions and strategies adopted by worker representatives to pursue dignity in the workplace can reduce economic inequality and fundamentally alter management strategic choice in adoption of high- versus low-road employment models. -- Dionne Pohler * Work and Occupations *This study is exemplary in its impressive attention to details regarding working conditions and industrial relations machinery, and in its combination of enterprise and regulatory histories with present-day quantitative and qualitative results. Furthermore, the book excels by attractive writing and presentation: the reader is put in the picture right from the start by an excellent summary chapter that explains general results at length and in the comparative context of the two countries. This overview leads on to the more detailed chapters in such an appealing way that the reader at all times understands the specific results as part of the wider picture. -- Arndt Sorge * British Journal of Industrial Relations *The book is well written and in large part a pleasure to read.. The topic of the book—the influence of different industrial relations regimes on managerial strategies, the development of working conditions and pay—is not new, but the book is outstanding in its broad empirical base and richness of data.. For unionists and policy makers striving to improve job quality in call centers and similar industries with secondary service-jobs, the book is an excellent argumentation aid as it provides ample evidence that this aim can be achieved and demonstrates how it can be done. -- Sabine Blaschke * Comparative Labor Law & Policy Journal *The author presents a complex, evolving picture in the analysis of her data set.... Although Doellgast has been influenced by... the global call centre project, she extends the analysis in important ways. Intriguingly, while the global project did not find meaningful associations between trade unionism and high employee involvement systems this relationship lies at the heart of this book. Overall, the author provides valuable evidence of the challenges that globalization poses to social market labour regimes. -- Bob Russell * British Journal of Sociology *In vivid descriptions of the call centers she spent time in, and eye-opening interviews, Doellgast shows us the wide range of experiences call workers have.... She uses call centers to illustrate all that is wrong with advanced economies, as well as how things can be made right.... The object lesson is clear: high-skill, high-participation, high-wage workers are not just happier campers, they are better for business. -- Frank Dobbin * Administrative Science Quarterly *The author successfully claims a contribution in presenting a study of networked firms and the impact of decisions in one organization on its collaborating partners, concluding that regulation at the inter-organizational level is a necessary support to formal participation models.... Doellgast's extended study... supports the author's optimism that unions have an important contribution to make to lower skilled, secondary jobs in the service economy. -- Shelagh Campbell * Relations Industrielles/Industrial Relations *Determining Democracy reports an impressive body of empirical research. An innovative research design (four matched pairs of case studies) was used to study changes in the quality of employment systems in American and German call centres. -- Tom Langford * Labour/Le Travail *A valuable contribution to the field of comparative industrial relations. This book examines the role of unions within modern service workplaces by delving into case study analyses of the telecommunications and call center industries.... I highly recommend this book for those interested in comparative industrial relations and for anyone who wants to gain a better understanding of the telecommunications industry and/or U.S. and German employment systems.... Doellgast's theoretical framework and discussion of the findings offer an engaging read for students, scholars, and practitioners. -- Monica Bielski Boris * Labor Studies Journal *Table of Contents1. Introduction 2. Changes in Markets and Collective Bargaining 3. Using Power in the Workplace 4. Losing Power in the Networked Firm 5. Broadening the Comparison 6. ConclusionsAppendix A: Interviews conducted in the United States and Germany Appendix B: Organizational characteristics and employment practices by country, in-house and outsourced centers Appendix C: Organizational characteristics and employment practices by collective bargaining arrangements, United States and GermanyNotes Bibliography Index
£22.79
Cornell University Press Labor Relations in a Globalizing World
Book SynopsisCompelled by the extent to which globalization has changed the nature of labor relations, Harry C. Katz, Thomas A. Kochan, and Alexander J. S. Colvin give us the first textbook to focus on the workplace outcomes of the production of goods and services in emerging countries. In Labor Relations in a Globalizing World, they draw lessons from the United States and other advanced industrial countries to provide a menu of options for management, labor, and government leaders in emerging countries. They include discussions based in countries such as China, Brazil, India, and South Africa which, given the advanced levels of economic development they have already achieved, are often described as transitional, because the labor relations practices and procedures used in those countries are still in a state of flux.Katz, Kochan, and Colvin analyze how labor relations functions in emerging countries in a manner that is useful to practitioners, policymakers, and academics. They take accouTrade ReviewThis excellent comparative relations text written by three masters of the Wisconsin 'institutional' tradition analyzes employment through the perspective of industrial relations.... Readers will benefit from the insights the authors have derived from their own interventions as consultants and activists. Recommended for serious upper-division students and graduate students in labor relations, human resource management, sociology, and economics. -- D. C. Jacobs * CHOICE *Table of ContentsPART 1. The Strategic Level of Labor Relations 1. A Framework for Analyzing Labor Relations 2. Labor, Management, and Government Interactions 3. The Law and Legal Systems 4. The Role of the Economic, Technological, and Demographic EnvironmentsPART 2. The Middle (Functional) Level of Labor Relations 5. Employment Systems—Informal, Bureaucratic, and Human Resource Management 6. The Negotiations Process and Structures 7. Dispute Resolution ProceduresPART 3. The Workplace Level of Labor Relations 8. Workplace Labor Relations 9. Employment OutcomesPART 4. Special Topics 10. Labor Relations in the Public Sector 11. Global Pressures: Multinational Corporations, International Unionism, and NGOs 12. Economic Development Strategies and PoliciesGlossary Index
£43.20
Cornell University Press After Lean Production Evolving Employment
Book SynopsisIndustrial relations experts from eleven countries consider the state of the automobile industry worldwide.Trade ReviewAn informative book that provides an excellent overview of developments in the global auto industry. * American Journal of Sociology *For anyone interested in international trends in human resource management practices, reviews of lean production in practice, or detailed comparisons of manufacturing operations by nation in the car industry, After Lean Production is a valuable resource.... After Lean Production is a rich collection of case studies, offering detailed pictures of the manufacturing practices and employment policies of a number of plants. The case studies are... well written and informative. This volume... can be recommended for the scholar or practitioner who wants to learn more about how international trends in human resources practices are shaped and molded by the national institutions, laws, and traditions. * Personnel Psychology *The essays are useful because they analyze recent changes in the organization of work in various national automobile industries, connect these changes, in almost all cases, to some type of 'crisis,' and demonstrate that these changes are inspired by Japanese methods of so-called 'lean production.'... The relevance and timeliness of the essays make this book a worthy addition to any collection on the world auto industry. * Choice *
£35.15
Cornell University Press Crossing the Great Divide
Book SynopsisThe 1990s were years of turmoil and transformation in American work experiences and employment relationships. Trends including the growth of contingent labor, the erosion of the stable employment contract, the restructuring of jobs and companies, and...Trade ReviewCrossing the Great Divide is an expos' of the downside of the risk in the new economy. Vicki Smith argues that 'temporariness and risk' have become intertwined with workers' expectations of opportunity and advancement, which were understood in the days of the old economy as the rewards for hard work or even dedication. -- Gina Neff, Columbia University * Dissent *Providing a welcome change of direction... Vicki Smith's book argues convincingly that we should not take a romantic view of work in the age of mass production.... Her research has thrown up a plausible conclusion that today's booming US employment market with its 'turbulence, decentral-isation, variation, and unpredictability' offers many workers what they see as an opportunity... 'to invest themselves in their work.'. -- Robert Taylor * Financial Times *There is a growing literature on globalization, employment restructuring, and the postindustrial workplace. Much of that work may already be obsolete, however, as recent evidence suggests that both the cynics and the optimists are wrong—or, at least, only partly right. Crossing the Great Divide is among the first books that tackle this complexity head on and, in the process, provides students and researchers with new ways to think about employment in the 21st century. -- Amy S. Wharton, Washington State University * American Journal of Sociology *Each of the participants in Smith's four studies must cope with the contradictions faced by those whose jobs may be at risk but who also face new opportunities at the same time, and she explores how workers attempt to cross 'the great divide' and take advantage of the 'new economy.'. -- David Rouse * Booklist *Smith examines how different groups of workers acquire the skills, know-how, cultural and human capital, and mental aptitudes that might help them reap the benefits of the new economy. * Choice *
£26.59
Hopkins Fulfillment Service On Signs
Book SynopsisSebeok, and others.Trade ReviewBlonsky has grouped numerous original and newly translated works by those who have been highly visible forces in semiotic circles... His book functions as a unified voice proclaiming the power of semiotics to reveal the hidden practices and secrets of modern society. Journal of CommunicationTable of ContentsPrefaceFriendsIntroduction. The Agony of SemioticsPart I. Seeing SignsPart II. Understanding the Meaning of SignsPart III. Signs of LifeEndword. Americans on the MoveNotes on ContributorsAcknowledgementsIndex
£27.55
Johns Hopkins University Press The Rational Factory
Book SynopsisHer interdisciplinary study draws from the fields of business history, engineering, technology, architecture, and theories of modernity. Why did some people want to rationalize the factory, she asks, and how did the system impact those who worked under it?Trade ReviewTraditional business history at its best, essential reading for anyone interested in the history of efficiency, technology, and work in the United States. -- William Roy Journal of American History Enhances our understanding of the shift away from a more romantic nineteenth-century artisanal world to the rational, machine- and factory-based, mass production of the twentieth century. Science, Technology, and Society This interdisciplinary study aptly illustrates how buildings are much more than silent historical witnesses; they are in fact central, active components within the process of social change. Michigan Historical Review An important addition to the literature of industrial development. -- Paul Israel American Historical Review The Rational Factory is a substantial contribution to the history of industrial engineering and industrial architecture in the 19th and 20th centuries. -- Charles K. Hyde Industrial Archeology
£23.85
University of Nebraska Press Capitalist Family Values Gender Work and
Book SynopsisTrade Review"This book is both an indictment of corporate greed and a snapshot of racial and social attitudes in an almost decade-by-decade examination."—David Mills, Western Historical Quarterly"Capitalist Family Values: Gender, Work, and Corporate Culture at Boeing provides a unique and nuanced account of the intersection between gender and workplace culture during Boeing's hundred year history."—Sarah Moore, Biography: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly"Polly Reed Myers's Capitalist Family Values traces the evolution of corporate culture at one of the world's largest aerospace companies in order to elucidate the role of gender at work and the dynamics of occupational inequality. . . . Her attention to men in managerial and engineering occupations makes this a particularly welcome addition to the literature on gender and work in the twentieth-century United States."—Natalie J. Marine-Street, Pacific Historical Review“Capitalist Family Values represents a rich contribution to ongoing studies of work and labor history, women’s and gender history, history of sexuality, and the history of business.”—Amy Bix, author of Girls Coming to Tech! A History of American Engineering Education for Women Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Preface: Finding Women at Boeing Acknowledgments Introduction: The Boeing Family Chapter 1: Fraternalism and the Boeing News in the 1930s Chapter 2: Manpower versus Womanpower during World War II Chapter 3: Women’s Place in Equal Opportunity Employment Chapter 4: Jane Doe v. Boeing Company Chapter 5: Employing Teamwork Conclusion: Corporate Capitalism in the Twenty-First Century Notes Bibliography Index
£35.10
Stanford University Press Raising the Global Floor
Book SynopsisPresents results from a study of working conditions from nations around the world. This book offers recommendations for how individuals and nations can improve their own working conditions in economically viable ways, based on lessons from those that have gotten it right.Trade Review"Those interested in understanding the nuances of the data or details of the authors' macro-economic analyses of the effects of social welfare legislation on unemployment rates will find much of this information in the appendix or notes . . . [S]ociologists—especially those interested in gender, work, and family—will find this book an invaluable resource . . . With its numerous world maps depicting the availability of various work-related policies, Raising the Global Floor provides a valuable 'big picture' look at the global landscape."—Amy S. Wharton, Contemporary Sociology"How can we improve the daily conditions we all face at work and still live in countries that economically succeed? Heymann and Earle bring a decade of extraordinary research and exceptional insight to this critical question. Raising the Global Floor is a must read for anyone who cares about all our lives at work--the middle class and poor, at home and abroad."—Robert Reich, Professor of Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley, and Former U.S. Secretary of Labor"Heymann and Earle train a critical eye on international labor standards and ask what kinds of reforms would make a difference in the lives of workers, their children, and their communities. The issues are compelling, the research rich and thoughtful. Essential reading for anyone concerned about workers' rights in the United States and around the world."—Katherine Newman, Director, Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies"This important new book comes at the perfect moment. There is a desperate need for change and openness to new solutions. Heymann and Earle's careful and expansive research comes to the radical conclusion that decent work is not just a right—it is possible. Everyone who seeks to make the most of this moment needs this book."—Karen Nussbaum, Executive Director, Working America"This book provides an inspiring, accessible, and comprehensive guide to making the world a better place."—Nancy Folbre, MacArthur Award-winning Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts"A major contribution to the global human rights movement"—Ann Crittenden, author of The Price of Motherhood and former economics reporter for the New York Times"This is an unprecedented study—an outstanding mix of government reports, surveys, and data comparing countries across the globe on key policies surrounding work, family and community. The authors demonstrate quite convincingly that governments can enact legislation on working conditions for all without hurting companies and countries economically. Their data show that, indeed, there is global consensus on certain labor practices, which alone makes this book required reading for policymakers and human resource personnel."—Rosanna Hertz, Professor of Sociology and Women's Studies, Wellesley College"This is a well-written, thoroughly researched, compelling, and important book. Policy-makers, especially in the United States, should give it close attention."—Ron Saunders, Institute for Work & Health, Toronto"Raising the Global Floor is among the most persuasive, eye-opening, and timely books I've ever read. Every employer, activist, and policy maker should read this remarkable book!"——John de Graaf, Executive Director, Take Back Your Time
£33.25
Stanford University Press All I Want Is a Job
Book SynopsisTrade Review"By studying the work of helping others find work, Mary Gatta shifts our attention to the link between government policy and the experiences of unemployed workers seeking work . . . Gatta has pointed to one approach by studying work beyond the employment relation. We would do well to follow her example with other approaches."—Mark Zbaracki, IRL Review"Gatta's research makes a significant contribution to the literature on the workforce development system as little is known about the One-Stop Career Centers and even less is known about women's experiences at the One-Stop Career Centers. In addition, Gatta's work is unique in its methodology. Whereas many existing studies are quantitative and outcomes-focused, Gatta uses participant observation and focus groups. In doing so, she is able to explore how women are experiencing the workforce development system rather than just how many women were served or obtained employment."—Skye Allmang, Social Service Review"Mary Gatta adds to the literature by focusing on the felt experiences of women at One Stop Career Centers. With qualitative data, Gatta explores the experiences of customers and front line workers at a New Jersey Center . . . With its lens on gender, this book is an important addition to workforce development literature."—Joyce Bialik, Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare"All I Want Is a Job! offers a valuable look inside our nation's main workforce development program. It should be required reading for anyone interested in low-wage work, labor markets, social welfare policy, and economic development."–Stephanie Luce, Gender & Society"In this short and very readable narrative, Gatta takes a different and unique approach. Posing as a client at a One-Stop Career Center, she experiences firsthand the trials and tribulations of job seekers. The author interviews the workers in these centers, discovering the difficulties of trying to implement policies set by others and the anxiety and stress in meeting the needs of the unemployed . . . The author concludes that there are no quick fixes, but at the margin there are key shifts to improve the system, which would serve the employed and unemployed alike and contribute to economic recovery and future prosperity . . . Recommended."—J. F. O'Connell, CHOICE"All I Want is a Job! is an engaging and timely book. It addresses the very pressing issue of the services provided to jobless workers, while also doing an excellent job of placing its findings in historical context."—Ofer Sharone, MIT Sloan School of Management"This is a special book that gives the reader a real sense of the world of One-Stop Career Centers. Delivering an insider's glimpse into their operation, Gatta's research will spark a serious discussion about the need to change our current system so that it actually meets the needs of those seeking employment."—Henry Plotkin, Former Executive Director of the New Jersey State Employment and Training Commission"Mary manages to discuss the problems that unemployed women face in finding work, not only from a practical point of view, but also from a personal standpoint. This book illustrates her rare talent for looking at individual concerns alongside bureaucracy with an eye toward reform. While giving us an intimate look inside the public work force system, she constructively suggests ways to improve government initiatives. All I Want Is a Job! is at once an eye opener and a beacon."—Frank Pallone, Jr., New Jersey Congressman"Mary Gatta has written a forceful, lucid, and critical guide for women to secure a living wage. Understanding the bewildering hell that is the public workforce system, Mary knowingly helps us to navigate it in order to produce the practical result we all seek: employment. This book is a 'must read' for those who care about lifting women out of poverty!"—Jim McGreevey, former Governor of New Jersey
£70.55
Stanford University Press Continuity Despite Change
Book SynopsisAs the dust settles on nearly three decades of economic reform in Latin America, one of the most fundamental economic policy areas has changed far less than expected: labor regulation. To date, Latin America''s labor laws remain both rigidly protective and remarkably diverse. Continuity Despite Change develops a new theoretical framework for understanding labor laws and their change through time, beginning by conceptualizing labor laws as comprehensive systems or regimes. In this context, Matthew Carnes demonstrates that the reform measures introduced in the 1980s and 1990s have only marginally modified the labor laws from decades earlier. To explain this continuity, he argues that labor law development is constrained by long-term economic conditions and labor market institutions. He points specifically to two key factorsthe distribution of worker skill levels and the organizational capacity of workers. Carnes presents cross-national statistical evidence from the eightTrade Review"Rather than overturn previous research, Carnes's book extends and deepens it, both by expanding the time frame and by applying quantitative tools that reinforce and refine elements of earlier work . . . Carnes's book is an important addition to the literature on Latin American labor laws. His effort to provide a coherent explanation for the evolution of labor codes raises new questions as well, inviting more scholars to explore this complex topic." -- Maria Lorena Cook * Hispanic American Historical Review *"Carnes undertakes an ambitious exploration of Latin America's labor laws over the past several decades. Utilizing cross-national data from 18 major Latin American economies, the author presents qualitative and quantitative analyses that conclude that two factors—labor's organizational capabilities and the distribution of worker skills—determine the extent of labor reforms adopted by Latin American countries . . . Summing Up: Highly Recommended." -- L. W. Young * CHOICE *"This important book pushes us to think afresh about labor's enduring role in Latin American politics. Through a meticulous analysis of the region's diverse laws governing work and worker organization, Carnes helps us see how national-level organized union activity has shaped the path of labor law reform. It deserves high praise for its skillful combination of quantitative and qualitative methods—and rich case studies of Argentina, Chile, and Peru—which work together to tell a compelling and important story about the evolution of labor law in Latin America. Carnes' findings are especially pertinent now, as they help explain why Latin America has largely preserved labor codes that are mismatched for the competitive demands of a global economy. This book will be essential reading for those interested in Latin American labor, economic change, and political economy." -- Timothy R. Scully * University of Notre Dame *"This book will be a required read for labor scholars of Latin America and beyond, and a wonderful contribution to any course on labor or the political economy of development." -- Mark Anner * Latin American Politics and Society *"Carnes's conclusion that most labor codes in Latin America have not been rewritten to make them compatible with market reforms is significant. His work, further, shows how the industries deemed key for twentieth-century projects of nation-state formation (such as mining) had the most protective individual labor legislation (for instance, provisions structuring hiring and dismissal)." -- Alejandra González Jiménez * Latin American Research Review *Table of ContentsContents and AbstractsIntroduction: Introduction: Continuity Despite Change chapter abstractThis chapter describes the puzzling persistence of extremely protective labor laws in Latin America, in spite of significant competitive pressures from globalization and a series of attempted reforms in the 1980s and 1990s. It notes that labor laws have been more resistant to reform than any other area of economic policy, and motivates the rest of the book by explaining the importance of labor law as both a dependent variable and independent variable, outlining the history of study of Latin American labor laws, and describing the implications of different forms of labor regulation for outcomes as diverse as economic inequality and political participation. It concludes with an overview of the remaining chapters of the book. 1Explaining Enduring Labor Codes in Developing Countries: Skill Distributions and the Organizational Capacity of Labor chapter abstractThis chapter builds a general theory of labor regulation. It describes the labor law "policy space" and articulates a typology of four hypothetical labor law "regimes." It traces the origins to these regimes to two explanatory variables: (1) the distribution of skills in the economy, and (2) the ability of labor to organize to represent its interests. It argues that these factors played a critical role in shaping the earliest state efforts at regulating labor relations in Latin America, beginning in the late 1800s and early 1900s. It then develops a series of arguments about how skill distributions and labor organization functioned under successive waves of economic policy. During industrialization (as occurred in the middle of the twentieth century), they shaped the expansion of coverage of labor regulation. And under globalization (at the turn of the millennium), they constrained – and in many cases, severely limited – the extent of liberalizing reforms. 2Using Multiple Methods to Understand Labor Law Development in Latin America chapter abstractThis chapter describes the two-pronged methodological approach employed in the remainder of the book. First, it describes the original dataset assembled for the quantitative analysis – a comparative operationalization of 23 labor law features from 18 countries – and details the strengths and weaknesses implied in a quantitative research strategy. Next, it describes the qualitative, "analytic narrative" approach employed in the case studies. It discusses the selection criteria for choosing Chile, Peru, and Argentina as exemplary cases, and provides a preliminary comparison of their relative skill levels and labor organization throughout the twentieth century. 3Latin American Labor Laws in Comparative Perspective chapter abstractThis chapter employs an original cross-national dataset of individual and collective labor regulations to chart the range of variation in labor laws within Latin America during the 1980-2005 period. Econometric analysis finds that skill levels and organizational capacity are consistently correlated with differences in labor regulation "regimes" in recent decades. In addition, the chapter tests alternative hypotheses present in the literature, finding that government partisanship has important effects both through its historical legacies and through the reforms proposed by sitting governments. 4Fragmented Individualism: Professional Labor Regulation in Chile chapter abstractThis chapter examines Chile as an example of a "professional" labor law regime, characterized by laws that strongly protect individual labor relations but fragmented and weaken collective labor relations and unions. It traces the roots of Chile's early labor laws to patterns of labor recruitment in Chile's geographically isolated mines, its ports, and its urban professional sectors. It then shows how subsequent periods of economic development further fragmented coordination across labor unions, while preserving significant individual protections for a reduced share of the workforce in skilled or critical economic sectors. 5Contradictions, Division, and Competition: Encompassing Labor Regulation in Peru chapter abstractThis chapter examines Peru as an example of an "encompassing" labor law regime, which offers low levels of individual worker protections but facilitates independent union organization and activity. It argues that the lower level of skills in the Peruvian economy made organization around issues of individual contracting difficult. Further, frequent periods of authoritarian rule and weak ties between workers and political parties offered few opportunities for the advancement of labor's collective interests. As a result, during the globalization period, Peru has undermined even the weak labor laws it had developed, consigning an ever-greater proportion of the population to work without legal protection. 6Integration and Incorporation: Corporatist Labor Regulation in Argentina chapter abstractThis chapter examines Argentina as an example of a "corporatist" labor law regime, with high levels of both individual and collective labor regulations. It argues that the country's early labor market conditions – including significant immigration from Europe and relatively high education and skill levels – led to more extensive initial legal protections. In later decades, labor law became a vehicle for incorporating a broad swath of workers into the movement surrounding Perón and the party that has continued his legacy. It concludes by contending that in recent years, strong ties between the Peronist party and organized workers account for the relatively meager liberalization that has occurred. Conclusion: Conclusion: Politics and Labor Regulation in Latin America chapter abstractThis brief chapter accomplishes three tasks. First, it summarizes the book's major contributions, highlighting how its theoretical approach and long historical perspective permit a better understanding of the surprising stability in labor codes in Latin America, despite efforts and pressures for reform. Second, it discusses the implications of the book's findings for study of Latin American social policy, political economy, and corporatism. It concludes by suggesting future avenues for research on labor laws in the region, noting the need for more extensive study of variation in compliance and enforcement of legal regimes.
£55.80
Stanford University Press Global Talent
Book SynopsisGlobal Talent seeks to examine the utility of skilled foreigners beyond their human capital value by focusing on their social capital potential, especially their role as transnational bridges between host and home countries. Gi-Wook Shin and Joon Nak Choi build on an emerging stream of research that conceptualizes global labor mobility as a positive-sum game in which countries and businesses benefit from building ties across geographic space, rather than the zero-sum game implied by the global war for talent and brain drain metaphors.The book empirically demonstrates its thesis by examination of the case of Korea: a state archetypical of those that have been embracing economic globalization while facing a demographic crisisand one where the dominant narrative on the recruitment of skilled foreigners is largely negative. It reveals the unique benefits that foreign students and professionals can provide to Korea, by enhancing Korean firms'' competitiveness in the global Trade Review"Overall, this book offers theoretical lessons for general research on transnationalism and cultural and social capital of highly skilled migrants, even though it focuses most explicitly on business and labor markets. It invites the attention of policy makers and business strategists, who also appear to be its intended audience." —Keumjae Park, International Migration Review"Advanced economies like Korea face a growing mismatch between low birth rates and increasing demand for skilled labor. Shin and Choi use original, comprehensive data and a global outlook to provide careful, accessible and persuasive analysis. Their prescriptions for Korea and other economies challenged by high-level labor shortages will amply reward readers of this landmark study."—Mark Granovetter, Professor of Sociology, Stanford UniversityTable of ContentsContents and Abstracts1Towards a New Model of Engaging Skilled Foreigners chapter abstractKorea has pursued new opportunities for continued growth, but has been hampered its lack of global talent— individuals with key skills conferring valuable advantages in global markets. Countries like the United States have generated such advantages by recruiting skilled foreigners. Korea has had difficulty recruiting such foreigners because its strong ethnic nationalism makes it comparatively unfriendly for foreigners. Yet, Korea can leverage skilled foreigners by inviting skilled foreigners for a short-term sojourn. Since they will have difficulty assimilating, such foreigners are not expected to stay and contribute their human capital over the long-term. However, if they return home, they can become transnational bridges linking Korea with their home societies and create mutually beneficial opportunities for information exchange, cooperation and trade. Overall, Korea and similar countries in Europe and Asia can benefit from participating in global brain circulation, even if their ethnic nationalism hampers them from assimilating skilled foreigners. 2Foreign Students in Korea chapter abstractIn recent years, Korean universities have attracted an increasing number of foreign students, mainly within the Asian region. Some students expressed mainly instrumental reasons to study in Korea such as the lower cost, the availability of scholarships, and Korea's geographical proximity and social similarity to their home countries. In contrast, other students expressed mainly social identity reasons to study in Korea, mainly the opportunity to learn about Korea's development experience and to experience firsthand a culture they had learned to appreciate while consuming Korean cultural products abroad. Such individuals also expressed a desire to bridge Korea and their home countries for mutual benefit, a tremendous opportunity for all involved. Understanding this, several Korean firms have begun to recruit foreigners studying in Korea and begun training them to run subsidiaries in their home countries. 3Korean Students Abroad chapter abstractKoreans study at U.S. and Canadian universities to receive what they perceive to be a better education. On average, such students have a moderately high desire to return to Korea after completing their degrees, being more familiar with the Korean environment and wanting to spend more time with family and friends back home. Indeed, many individuals want overseas work experience to enhance their career prospects when they eventually return. However, two subgroups of Korean students abroad have less desire to return home. Choki yuhak students, who started studying overseas at a relatively young age, have become acculturated into in the U.S. and Canada and feel more comfortable there than in Korea. Also, students who attend Korean churches feel less homesickness, as these churches function as small-scale ethnic enclaves. Although they prefer to remain abroad, both groups have the capability and desire to bridge Korea with their host societies. 4The Korean Diaspora chapter abstractThe Korean diaspora includes some of the best-educated citizens of the U.S. and Canada. This group encompasses a range of individuals, from corporate ladder-climbers to freewheeling artists, who may or may not be familiar with Korea. Individuals unfamiliar with Korea express a strong desire to sojourn in Korea to reclaim their lost identities, but react very differently to actual sojourns based on their goals and interests. While business-oriented individuals react positively to the ample opportunities they encounter in Korea, others react negatively to the conformity and sexism they perceive as being prevalent. Individuals more familiar with Korea have little need to reclaim identities they never lost, and express greater interest in relocating to Korea long-term based on career opportunities they find there. Overall, a shared ethnic identity draws the diaspora back to Korea, where they can potentially contribute the abundant human and social capital they possess. 5Expatriate Indians and Korean Engineering chapter abstractThe manufacture and export of high-technology goods represents a crucial pillar of the Korean economy. Yet, the ongoing convergence between hardware and software threatens to topple this pillar, given Korea's shortage of software engineers. India produces more high-quality software engineers than its economy requires, creating an opportunity for foreign firms to recruit skilled engineers. However, Korean firms face competition from American rivals and are handicapped by Korea's ethnic nationalism. Although Korean firms may have difficulty recruiting graduates of the elite Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs), they are nevertheless attractive to non-IIT graduates who are nearly as qualified. Indeed, such individuals express special interest in East Asian countries to avoid social competition with IIT graduates. This example illustrates how social differences amongst skilled foreigners create opportunities for countries like Korea to recruit highly desirable groups despite intense competition. 6Towards a Global Korea chapter abstractThis book examines four different groups of skilled foreigners in the Korean context. The findings presented in the book have important theoretical and practical implications. Theoretically, the findings not only integrate geographic research on cross-national boundary spanners with sociological research on transnationalism, but also illuminate why individuals consciously decide to function as transnational bridges. Practically, the findings not only suggest how governments and firms might benefit from transnational bridging, but also how they might promote such behavior through university reforms and public diplomacy. However, the findings also suggest that Korea cannot fully benefit from transnational bridging without fundamental changes to its social institutions and corporate organizations. Although the book focused on the Korean context, its findings are also relevant towards many other economically advanced countries characterized by ethnic nationalism, such as Germany and Japan.
£19.94
Stanford University Press Waiting on Retirement
Book SynopsisTrade Review"Mary Gatta provides an important look at how the current—and future—retirement crisis affects some of the country's most vulnerable workers. Her research should inspire academics, activists, and policy makers to address the large segment of the workforce that is unable to sustain themselves at the end of their working years."—Deborah Harris, Texas State University"Mary Gatta's new book is a timely and necessary addition to the literature on restaurant workers. A career for millions of Americans, the industry does not ensure the economic security of its workforce. Gatta gives voice to the people who have devoted their lives to restaurant work, providing a much-needed warning call for the country and addressing the steps we must take to ensure a better future."—Teófilo Reyes, UC Berkeley Goldman School of Public Policy and Restaurant Opportunities Centers United"An intimate account of the startling impacts of the restaurant industry's precarious conditions. Women in particular have been subject to a wage structure that creates economic volatility, perpetuates harassment, and offers a blurry image of their future. In this groundbreaking historical moment, Mary Gatta provides a timely call to action, stressing that we need one fair wage and long-term economic security."—Saru Jayaraman, author of Forked: A New Standard for American Dining"Sociologist Gatta has provided a compassionate, clearly written, and jargon-free account of the difficult situation of American low-wage restaurant workers who do not retire, because they cannot afford to...She displays their nuanced situation without condescension or blame. Recommended."—R. R. Shield, CHOICETable of Contents1. The New Normal: Economic Insecurity in America 2. The Fast Money Trap 3. Aging in Low-Wage Work 4. Retiring in a Coffin 5. Crisis or Come Together
£73.95
John Wiley & Sons Work Identity and Legal Status at Rome
Book SynopsisWhat was daily life like for a working man or woman in the Roman Empire? This text examines Roman commemorative inscriptions from the 1st and 2nd centuries AD to determine ways in which slaves, freed slaves and unprivileged freeborn citizens used work to frame their identities.
£22.46
University of Pennsylvania Press Human Rights Labor Rights and International Trade
Book Synopsis"A significant contribution to current legal, political, and economic discourse on workers in the global economy."-International and Comparative Law QuarterlyTrade Review"Stimulating." * Foreign Affairs *"A significant contribution to current legal, political, and economic discourse on workers in the global economy." * International and Comparative Law Quarterly *
£25.19
University of Pennsylvania Press Fragments of Empire
Book SynopsisHistorians, by relying on biased sources, have perpetuated the acceptance of a privileged perspective on imperial British history.Trade Review"In Fragments of Empire indenture becomes a lens through which empire, in all its complexity and vastness, comes into view. This is an empire that one does not see usually, an empire better described as a single constellation that arises in the imbrication of different spaces, levels, practices, and ideas. I cannot say enough about the importance of this idea, for it forces us to rethink current notions of colonialism and imperialism."" * Gyan Prakash, Princeton University *"A landmark study. The book gives a completely new reading of the cultural, racial, and economic dynamics of indentured Indian labour in the British Caribbean. The book is nothing less than a wake-up call to postcolonial theorists." * EHR *"Fragments offers a new and refreshing perspective, taking us beyond chronology to a thorough examination of some of the macroconsiderations which tied together an early attempt at globalization. . . . Any attempt to understand this present must be based on that past. Fragments of Empire successfully unravels much of that complicated past, making sense of a tangled maze of imperialistic devices. In this sense it is a very useful continuation of our understanding of worldwide diasporas." * International Review of Social History *
£45.00
University of Pennsylvania Press Reform or Repression
Book SynopsisHistorians have characterized the open-shop movement of the early twentieth century as a cynical attempt by business to undercut the labor movement by twisting the American ideals of independence and self-sufficiency to their own ends. The precursors to today''s right-to-work movement, advocates of the open shop in the Progressive Era argued that honest workers should have the right to choose whether or not to join a union free from all pressure. At the same time, business owners systematically prevented unionization in their workplaces.While most scholars portray union opponents as knee-jerk conservatives, Chad Pearson demonstrates that many open-shop proponents identified themselves as progressive reformers and benevolent guardians of America''s economic and political institutions. By exploring the ways in which employers and their allies in journalism, law, politics, and religion drew attention to the reformist, rather than repressive, character of the open-shop movement, PTrade Review""Reform or Repression is a well-researched, informative history of the open-shop movement from 1890 to 1917. Chad Pearson provides a new, much-needed 'employer-centered analysis' . . . [that] is ambitious and far-reaching." * American Historical Review *"Repression or Reform attacks the "Labor Problem" with startling vigor. Armed with an exceptional amount of well-researched detail, . . . Pearson's prudently fashioned prose represents a superb and intimate understanding of the critical actors in this era of American labor history." * Journal of Economic History *"Pearson's book is without a doubt among the best labor histories to be published in recent years. In keeping with the modern trend in labor history, this is not a labor history in the "traditional" sense of the term. Rather than being based on union minutes and other records and on union publications, Reform or Repression is almost exclusively based on sources produced by the employing class . . . [A] truly great read, especially today when union membership has fallen to a historical low." * Against the Current *"A truly outstanding study on the pre-WW I origins of the 'open-shop' movement. . . . Highly Recommended." * Choice *"With a careful historian's eye for detail, Pearson charts the course of American business in its effort to contain and control the appeal of unionism to American workers. In doing so, he sheds light on the consciousness of businessmen and their associations and demonstrates that they were confronted by a strategic choice: whether to coopt or repress the American labor movement . . . This book makes an impressive contribution to understanding the diverse roots of the open shop movement. By focusing on employers' agency, the author has helped us see the crucial role of ideology in reproducing capitalist hegemony." * Socialism and Democracy *"Pearson's explorations of the varied commitments of open shop advocates to reform causes-including the open shop-provides a salutary illustration of the dangers of reductionist historical accounts." * Tom Mitchell, Labour/Le Travail *"Meticulously researched and well written, Reform or Repression tells a series of dramatic, linked stories of open shop campaigns. The book is part of a growing trend of labor historians studying management, though there is no other book quite like it." * David Roediger, author of The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class *Table of ContentsIntroduction. Reformers and Fighters: Employers and the Labor Problem PART I. NATION Chapter 1. Fighting "Union Dictation": Birth of the Open-Shop Movement Chapter 2. "For the Protection of the Common People": Citizens, Progressives, and "Free Workers" PART II. REGION Chapter 3. A Tale of Two Men: Class Traitors and Strikebreaking in Cleveland Chapter 4. Avenging McKinley: Organized Employers in Buffalo Chapter 5. Making the "City of Prosperity": The Poetry of Industrial Harmony in Worcester Chapter 6. "A Solid South for the Open Shop": N. F. Thompson and the Labor Solution Conclusion. Creating the "Common Good": Individual Rights, Industrial Progress, and Virtuous Citizenship Notes Index Acknowledgments
£49.30
John Wiley & Sons Job Loss Identity and Mental Health
Book SynopsisOur jobs are often a big part of our identities, and when we are fired, we can feel confused, hurt, and powerless - at sea in terms of who we are. Drawing on extensive, real-life interviews, Job Loss, Identity, and Mental Health shines a light on the experiences of unemployed, middle-class professional men and women, showing how job loss can affect both identity and mental health.Trade Review"Norris’s work is an accessible and engaging exploration of the effects that involuntary job loss has on people’s identities and their psychological health. Both informative and comprehensive, Job Loss, Identity, and Mental Health is a well written and very worthwhile book." -- Tim Strangleman * professor of sociology, University of Kent, UK *"This book offers a poignant assessment of the social-psychological consequences of unemployment. Using longitudinal in-depth interviews, Norris shows the profound costs of unemployment for middle-class workers. She also thoughtfully illuminates the importance of gender in the experience of joblessness. Recommended!" -- Annette Lareau * Stanley I. Sheerr Professor, University of Pennsylvania *"Norris’ book is a theoretically rich, well-written, and well-researched addition to the sociological study of employment and health" -- Jeremy Staff, Department of Sociology and Criminology, Pennsylvania State University * SAGE Publications - Work and Occupations *"A theoretically rich, well-written, and well-researched addition to the sociological study of employment and health." * Work and Occupations *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments1 Introduction2 Why Identity?3 “That’s Not the Way We Do It at Gentay”: Feedback Mismatches4 “I Wasn’t the Same Person”: Time Mismatches5 “Me Caveman . . . I Club Deer”: Status Mismatches6 “On the Mommy Track”: Shifting7 “It Was Like I Was Still Working”: Sustaining8 “Like You’re Dead and Nobody Told You”: Identity Void9 ConclusionAppendix A: MethodologyAppendix B: Additional ConsiderationsNotesReferencesIndex
£105.40
MW - Rutgers University Press Job Loss Identity and Mental Health
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£27.90
Univ of Chicago Behalf of Rutgers Univ Press When Good Jobs Go Bad Globalization Deunionization and Declining Job Quality in the North American Auto Industry
Trade Review"[When Good Jobs Go Bad] presents an automobile industry in decline. It begins with the North American Free Trade Agreement and recounts dramatic changes in employment and in the work environments at GM, Ford, and Chrysler … Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty." * Choice *"Ultimately, U.S., Mexican, and for that matter Chinese workers will write the next chapters in the evolution of the global auto industry. But for right now, Rothstein’s book offers a powerful analysis of how those good jobs went so bad." * Perspectives on Work *"When Good Jobs Go Bad is an excellent study: strategically designed, executed well, historically grounded, theoretically fruitful, gracefully written, and blessedly free from jargon... Best of all, it furnishes students with a vibrant and contemporary examples of C. Wright Mills' 'sociological imagination' revealing the complex and unhappy intersections of biography and history in the lives of automobile workers." * Contemporary Sociology *"An important and insightful intervention in the discussions of industrial upgrading and the auto industry, Rothstein provides a striking critique of lean production and the decline of good jobs." -- Nancy Plankey-Videla * author of We Are in This Dance Together *"It’s not just McDonald’s and Walmart. Rothstein brilliantly illuminates how even auto assembly jobs—still among the best blue collar jobs—have been steadily degraded by global corporations. An essential contribution to understanding work in the global economy." -- Chris Tilly * director, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, UCLA *"When Good Jobs Go Bad questions whether the tide is rising at all....This is a sobering read, but the final chapter explores some more hopeful possibilities....Perhaps the main lesson from this book is that there is no trade-off between workplace control and influence. When unions sacrifice the first, they risk losing both." * Work, Employment and Society *"Rothstein’s book provides us with much of what we need to understand why wages and the quality of work life in the US and Mexican auto industries has deteriorated since the late 1970s." * Journal of World-Systems Research *"[Rothstein's] important point is that there is nothing natural or inevitable about the form that globalization takes; the global economy is a product of political choices." * American Journal of Sociology *"[When Good Jobs Go Bad] presents an automobile industry in decline. It begins with the North American Free Trade Agreement and recounts dramatic changes in employment and in the work environments at GM, Ford, and Chrysler … Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty." * Choice *"Ultimately, U.S., Mexican, and for that matter Chinese workers will write the next chapters in the evolution of the global auto industry. But for right now, Rothstein’s book offers a powerful analysis of how those good jobs went so bad." * Perspectives on Work *"When Good Jobs Go Bad is an excellent study: strategically designed, executed well, historically grounded, theoretically fruitful, gracefully written, and blessedly free from jargon... Best of all, it furnishes students with a vibrant and contemporary examples of C. Wright Mills' 'sociological imagination' revealing the complex and unhappy intersections of biography and history in the lives of automobile workers." * Contemporary Sociology *"An important and insightful intervention in the discussions of industrial upgrading and the auto industry, Rothstein provides a striking critique of lean production and the decline of good jobs." -- Nancy Plankey-Videla * author of We Are in This Dance Together *"It’s not just McDonald’s and Walmart. Rothstein brilliantly illuminates how even auto assembly jobs—still among the best blue collar jobs—have been steadily degraded by global corporations. An essential contribution to understanding work in the global economy." -- Chris Tilly * director, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, UCLA *"When Good Jobs Go Bad questions whether the tide is rising at all....This is a sobering read, but the final chapter explores some more hopeful possibilities....Perhaps the main lesson from this book is that there is no trade-off between workplace control and influence. When unions sacrifice the first, they risk losing both." * Work, Employment and Society *"Rothstein’s book provides us with much of what we need to understand why wages and the quality of work life in the US and Mexican auto industries has deteriorated since the late 1970s." * Journal of World-Systems Research *"[Rothstein's] important point is that there is nothing natural or inevitable about the form that globalization takes; the global economy is a product of political choices." * American Journal of Sociology *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments1 Introduction: Three Auto Plants in the Global Economy2 The Intensification of Work under Lean Production3 Whipsawed! Local Unions Fight for Jobs in the United States4 Greenfield Opportunity: Orchestrated Labor Relations in Silao5 Globalization and Union Decline6 Conclusion: Toward a Better-Regulated Global EconomyNotesReferencesIndex
£26.99
John Wiley & Sons When Good Jobs Go Bad Globalization Deunionization and Declining Job Quality in the North American Auto Industry
Trade Review"[When Good Jobs Go Bad] presents an automobile industry in decline. It begins with the North American Free Trade Agreement and recounts dramatic changes in employment and in the work environments at GM, Ford, and Chrysler … Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty." * Choice *"Ultimately, U.S., Mexican, and for that matter Chinese workers will write the next chapters in the evolution of the global auto industry. But for right now, Rothstein’s book offers a powerful analysis of how those good jobs went so bad." * Perspectives on Work *"When Good Jobs Go Bad is an excellent study: strategically designed, executed well, historically grounded, theoretically fruitful, gracefully written, and blessedly free from jargon... Best of all, it furnishes students with a vibrant and contemporary examples of C. Wright Mills' 'sociological imagination' revealing the complex and unhappy intersections of biography and history in the lives of automobile workers." * Contemporary Sociology *"An important and insightful intervention in the discussions of industrial upgrading and the auto industry, Rothstein provides a striking critique of lean production and the decline of good jobs." -- Nancy Plankey-Videla * author of We Are in This Dance Together *"It’s not just McDonald’s and Walmart. Rothstein brilliantly illuminates how even auto assembly jobs—still among the best blue collar jobs—have been steadily degraded by global corporations. An essential contribution to understanding work in the global economy." -- Chris Tilly * director, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, UCLA *"When Good Jobs Go Bad questions whether the tide is rising at all....This is a sobering read, but the final chapter explores some more hopeful possibilities....Perhaps the main lesson from this book is that there is no trade-off between workplace control and influence. When unions sacrifice the first, they risk losing both." * Work, Employment and Society *"Rothstein’s book provides us with much of what we need to understand why wages and the quality of work life in the US and Mexican auto industries has deteriorated since the late 1970s." * Journal of World-Systems Research *"[Rothstein's] important point is that there is nothing natural or inevitable about the form that globalization takes; the global economy is a product of political choices." * American Journal of Sociology *"[When Good Jobs Go Bad] presents an automobile industry in decline. It begins with the North American Free Trade Agreement and recounts dramatic changes in employment and in the work environments at GM, Ford, and Chrysler … Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty." * Choice *"Ultimately, U.S., Mexican, and for that matter Chinese workers will write the next chapters in the evolution of the global auto industry. But for right now, Rothstein’s book offers a powerful analysis of how those good jobs went so bad." * Perspectives on Work *"When Good Jobs Go Bad is an excellent study: strategically designed, executed well, historically grounded, theoretically fruitful, gracefully written, and blessedly free from jargon... Best of all, it furnishes students with a vibrant and contemporary examples of C. Wright Mills' 'sociological imagination' revealing the complex and unhappy intersections of biography and history in the lives of automobile workers." * Contemporary Sociology *"An important and insightful intervention in the discussions of industrial upgrading and the auto industry, Rothstein provides a striking critique of lean production and the decline of good jobs." -- Nancy Plankey-Videla * author of We Are in This Dance Together *"It’s not just McDonald’s and Walmart. Rothstein brilliantly illuminates how even auto assembly jobs—still among the best blue collar jobs—have been steadily degraded by global corporations. An essential contribution to understanding work in the global economy." -- Chris Tilly * director, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, UCLA *"When Good Jobs Go Bad questions whether the tide is rising at all....This is a sobering read, but the final chapter explores some more hopeful possibilities....Perhaps the main lesson from this book is that there is no trade-off between workplace control and influence. When unions sacrifice the first, they risk losing both." * Work, Employment and Society *"Rothstein’s book provides us with much of what we need to understand why wages and the quality of work life in the US and Mexican auto industries has deteriorated since the late 1970s." * Journal of World-Systems Research *"[Rothstein's] important point is that there is nothing natural or inevitable about the form that globalization takes; the global economy is a product of political choices." * American Journal of Sociology *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments1 Introduction: Three Auto Plants in the Global Economy2 The Intensification of Work under Lean Production3 Whipsawed! Local Unions Fight for Jobs in the United States4 Greenfield Opportunity: Orchestrated Labor Relations in Silao5 Globalization and Union Decline6 Conclusion: Toward a Better-Regulated Global EconomyNotesReferencesIndex
£105.40
New York University Press Nice Work If You Can Get It
Book SynopsisCombining detailed case studies with lucid analysis and graphic prose, the author looks at what the new landscape of contingent employment means for workers across national, class, and racial lines-from the emerging creative class of high-wage professionals to the multitudes of temporary, migrant, or low-wage workers.Trade ReviewNice Work provides insight into a sea change in labor markets and work lives that has occurred over the past forty years. It is an intelligent work that raises thought-provoking questions about contingent labor. -- Steven T. Sheehan * Enterprise and Society *Nice Work If You Can Get It, insists that the combination of transnational capitalism and globalization has eliminated stability and security from the lives of working people. * The New Leader *Nice Work If You Can Get It, is impressive for its extraordinary range and sweep, and for asking questions about the kinds of transnational and cross-class alliances that might be made, the kinds of solidarities that might be forged, between differently positioned members of the global & precariat: sweatshop labourers, janitors, academics, and creatives. In doing so it offers a passionate, humane critique of contemporary capitalism. * Times Higher Education Supplement *According to Ross, job insecurity became commonplace long before the current financial debacle. As economies shifted from industry to information, the benefits and securities of the Keynesian era quietly gave way to a workforce of temps, freelancers, adjuncts, and migrants. Ross finds that city fathers are more interested in Olympic bids and stadium projects than in sustainable employment, while corporations spend more on & social responsibility public-relations campaigns than on addressing worker complaints, and activists are too focussed on narrow concerns to find common cause with natural allies. * The New Yorker *Economic liberalization, [Ross] demonstrates, has opened up a frenetic global traffic in jobs and migrants, uprooting people in a manner both useful and troubling to the managers of capital. In short, more people are available to exploit, but they are also harder to control. . . . A thorough and thoughtful study of global professional insecurity. * The Times Literary Supplement *Though Ross favors ironic twists on cliches like Nice Work If You Can Get It, he might also have titled the book Working Absurd. And though he would probably resist the high handed aspect of the public intellectual, he has fleshed out the precarious and inequitable terms of contemporary labor, meeting people where they are." * The Chronicle Review *With admirable timing, [Ross] examines a global workplace infrastructure thats as shaky as the economy would indicate. . . . Though far from uplifting, this is a bold, pointed look at reality as it is, a far more valuable commodity. * Publishers Weekly, Starred Review *What is compelling about Rosss analysis of precarity is recognition that the & movement of these part-time workers is loaded with a host of internal contradictions. The concept of precarity has been deployed by academics and organized labor to describe the & condition of social and economic insecurity associated with post-Fordist employment and neoliberal governance (p. 34). [] As Ross asks: & Even if this concept is theoretically plausible, does it make sense to imagine cross-class coalitions of the precarious capable of developing a unity of consciousness and action on an international scale? (p. 6). Indeed, this remains a pertinent question considering the debates emerging as a result of the international Occupy phenomenon. * Critical Sociology *This excellent and, in places, brilliant book should be read by anyone interested in a timely and astute analysis of the malaise of life and work in neoliberal postmodern society. . . . Highly recommended. * Choice *Illuminating. . . . Who knows what will be on the table when the damage of the global crisis is told? At the very least, one may hope for a return to security, sensible financial regulation, and a renewed interest in economic equity. Other worlds are possible, and with luck thinkers like Ross can point the way to imagining them more fully. * BookForum *Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Introduction I Creative Workers and Rent-Seeking 1 The Mercurial Career of Creative Industries Policymaking in the United Kingdom, the European Union, and the United States 2 China's Next Cultural Revolution? 3 The Olympic Goose That Lays the Golden Egg II Sustainability and the Ground Staff 4 Teamsters, Turtles, and Tainted Toys 5 Learning from San Ysidro III Instruments of Knowledge Capitalism 6 The Copyfight over Intellectual Property 7 The Rise of the Global University Conclusion: Maps and ChartersNotesReferences Index About the Author
£70.30
New York University Press Nice Work If You Can Get It Life and Labor in
Book SynopsisAre we all temps now? A penetrating exploration of how making a living has become such a precarious taskTrade ReviewNice Work provides insight into a sea change in labor markets and work lives that has occurred over the past forty years. It is an intelligent work that raises thought-provoking questions about contingent labor. -- Steven T. Sheehan * Enterprise and Society *Nice Work If You Can Get It, insists that the combination of transnational capitalism and globalization has eliminated stability and security from the lives of working people. * The New Leader *Nice Work If You Can Get It, is impressive for its extraordinary range and sweep, and for asking questions about the kinds of transnational and cross-class alliances that might be made, the kinds of solidarities that might be forged, between differently positioned members of the global & precariat: sweatshop labourers, janitors, academics, and creatives. In doing so it offers a passionate, humane critique of contemporary capitalism. * Times Higher Education Supplement *According to Ross, job insecurity became commonplace long before the current financial debacle. As economies shifted from industry to information, the benefits and securities of the Keynesian era quietly gave way to a workforce of temps, freelancers, adjuncts, and migrants. Ross finds that city fathers are more interested in Olympic bids and stadium projects than in sustainable employment, while corporations spend more on & social responsibility public-relations campaigns than on addressing worker complaints, and activists are too focussed on narrow concerns to find common cause with natural allies. * The New Yorker *Economic liberalization, [Ross] demonstrates, has opened up a frenetic global traffic in jobs and migrants, uprooting people in a manner both useful and troubling to the managers of capital. In short, more people are available to exploit, but they are also harder to control. . . . A thorough and thoughtful study of global professional insecurity. * The Times Literary Supplement *Though Ross favors ironic twists on cliches like Nice Work If You Can Get It, he might also have titled the book Working Absurd. And though he would probably resist the high handed aspect of the public intellectual, he has fleshed out the precarious and inequitable terms of contemporary labor, meeting people where they are." * The Chronicle Review *With admirable timing, [Ross] examines a global workplace infrastructure thats as shaky as the economy would indicate. . . . Though far from uplifting, this is a bold, pointed look at reality as it is, a far more valuable commodity. * Publishers Weekly, Starred Review *What is compelling about Rosss analysis of precarity is recognition that the & movement of these part-time workers is loaded with a host of internal contradictions. The concept of precarity has been deployed by academics and organized labor to describe the & condition of social and economic insecurity associated with post-Fordist employment and neoliberal governance (p. 34). [] As Ross asks: & Even if this concept is theoretically plausible, does it make sense to imagine cross-class coalitions of the precarious capable of developing a unity of consciousness and action on an international scale? (p. 6). Indeed, this remains a pertinent question considering the debates emerging as a result of the international Occupy phenomenon. * Critical Sociology *This excellent and, in places, brilliant book should be read by anyone interested in a timely and astute analysis of the malaise of life and work in neoliberal postmodern society. . . . Highly recommended. * Choice *Illuminating. . . . Who knows what will be on the table when the damage of the global crisis is told? At the very least, one may hope for a return to security, sensible financial regulation, and a renewed interest in economic equity. Other worlds are possible, and with luck thinkers like Ross can point the way to imagining them more fully. * BookForum *Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Introduction I Creative Workers and Rent-Seeking 1 The Mercurial Career of Creative Industries Policymaking in the United Kingdom, the European Union, and the United States 2 China's Next Cultural Revolution? 3 The Olympic Goose That Lays the Golden Egg II Sustainability and the Ground Staff 4 Teamsters, Turtles, and Tainted Toys 5 Learning from San Ysidro III Instruments of Knowledge Capitalism 6 The Copyfight over Intellectual Property 7 The Rise of the Global University Conclusion: Maps and ChartersNotesReferences Index About the Author
£22.79
University of Minnesota Press Fires on the Border
Book SynopsisFires on the Border takes up questions of labor and community organizing—its “affect-culture”—on Mexico’s northern border from the early 1970s to the present day. Through these campaigns, Rosemary Hennessy illuminates the attachments and identifications that motivate people to act on behalf of one another and that bind them to a common cause. Trade Review"Fires on the Border addresses a clear gap in the scholarship on transnational movements and organizing along the Mexico-U.S. divide: the role of sexuality in the creation of affective bonds within social alliances and political networks that span the grassroots to the transnational. In this timely, excellent book, Rosemary Hennessy incorporates a political economic analysis in her discussion of affective alliances in social movements (binational and/or transnational) among workers affected by the maquiladora industry." —Melissa W. Wright, author of Disposable Women and Other Myths of Global CapitalismTable of ContentsContentsIntroductionI. History, Affect, Representation1. Labor Organizing in Mexico's Entangled Economies2. The Materiality of Affect3. Bearing WitnessII. Sex, Labor, Movement4. Open Secrets5. The Value of a Second Skin6. Feeling Bodies, Jeans, Justice7. The North-South EncuentrosIII. The Utopian Question8. Love in the CommonAcknowledgmentsNotesBibliographyIndex
£19.79
University of Minnesota Press Degraded Work
Book SynopsisTrade Review"Marc Doussard posits a new interpretation of the 2001 to 2006 profit-wage disjuncture that is innovative and fresh. This is the stuff of truly innovative urban-economic analysis."—David Wilson, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign"Distinctive and pioneering, Degraded Work analyzes the areas of excess profit within two sectors that are often viewed as very close to perfectly competitive, smaller scale neighborhood retail and residential construction. These detailed analyses help make a broader case that low wages and precarious work are not inevitable. Doussard integrates these elements into an instructive polemic against some popular but oversimplified analyses of urban and labor market restructuring, introducing the concept of degraded work to capture the changes he observes."—Chris Tilly, UCLA"An important and much-needed intervention in the literature on inequality and low-wage work."—Labour/Le Travail"Degraded Work is a valuable contribution to the study of low-wage work, inequality, labor markets, and organizing. Doussard makes a convincing case that policy makers, practitioners, and scholars need to engage in serious local, sectoral research in order to truly understand the labor market."—Social Service Review"Well-written and clearly argued."—International Journal of Urban and Regional Research"Well-researched and illuminating."—Labor Studies Journal"A remarkably detailed book, Degraded Work challenges one of the dominant theories for urban inequality in North America and challenges readers to do something about inequality in their own city. Perhaps Doussard’s greatest accomplishment is to challenge what his readers believe and what they are doing with their lives or careers, without being confrontational. His analysis shows considerable depth and detail, but he presents it with humor, and without pretense, so it is accessible to experts and laypeople alike."—Economic Geography"Marc Doussard’s Degraded Work is a timely foray into the complex and controversial reality of current workplace circumstances and conditions in urban America."—AAG Review of BooksTable of ContentsContentsIntroduction: The Boom in Poorly Paid and Precarious Jobs1. New Inequalities: The Deterioration of Local-Serving Industries2. Beyond Low Wages: The Problem of Degraded Work3. The City That Sweats Work: Growth and Inequality in Post-Fordist Chicago4. Oases in the Midst of Deserts: How Food Retailers Thrive in Disinvested Neighborhoods5. “They’re Happy to Have a Job”: Mid-Size Supermarkets and Degraded Work6. Building Degradation: Dangerous Work and Falling Pay during a Construction Boom7. A Perfectly Flexible Workforce: Day Labor in a Precarious Industry8. New Answers to New Problems: The Creative Work of Reversing Degradation Conclusion: Building a Fair Labor Market in Post-Manufacturing EconomiesAcknowledgmentsNotesBibliographyIndex
£19.79
John Wiley & Sons Adequacy of Retirement Income after Pension Refo
Book SynopsisEstimating the gross and net replacement rates in 9 countries for steady conditions until 2040 show that they are adequate for most categories of workers, with the exception of those with intermittent or no formal sector employment.
£30.56
Ohio University Press Embodied Engineering Gendered Labor Food
Book SynopsisCommon narratives about development in Africa miss the critical technological work of women. Twagira’s study instead positions Malian women as rural engineers whose strategic planning and labor over the course of the twentieth century assured their food security.Trade Review“Through vivid stories of individual innovation and strategies of survival, Twagira offers a new perspective on twentieth-century biopolitics in Mali. Embodied Engineering adds important critical nuance to understandings of environmental crisis, cultural value, and gendered knowledge production in West Africa.”“By focusing on gender ideology, food technologies, and development initiatives, Twagira encourages readers to consider the “lived material bodies” of women in twentieth-century rural Mali…. Summing up: Recommended.” * Choice 59, no. 10 (June 2022) *“A fantastic contribution to multiple fields of study, both within and beyond the academy. Twagira fulfills her stated objectives, particularly that of addressing the prevalent assumptions of African women as without access to technology and static in their work. Her research shows the immense agency and importance of Malian women in their capacity to cultivate embodied relationships with the natural world through the cultivation, collection, and cooking of food.” * H-Sci-Med-Tech / H-Net Reviews *
£26.09
Duke University Press ReadytoWear and ReadytoWork
Book SynopsisThe story of urban growth, the politics of labour, and the relationships among the many immigrant groups who have come to work on the sewing machines of the women's garment industry over the last century. This book is of interest to a range of scholars, including those engaged in labour, immigrant, and women's history.Trade Review“Nancy Green consistently challenges the narratives and categories by which labor historians, sociologists, economists, and journalists have addressed the history of urban garment production. Green’s analysis is a tour de force.”—Donald Reid, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill“This is a terrific, wide-ranging, and convincing comparative study. It provides the big picture, analyzing the garment industry and particularly ‘ready-to-wear’ from the point of view of economic, social, cultural, political, and gender history. Ready-to-Wear and Ready-to-Work provides a much-needed synthesis which is all the bolder for the original research on which it is built.”—John Merriman, Yale University
£89.10
Duke University Press Expanding Class
Book SynopsisPresents the study and story of industrial class relations in North Brabant, a Catholic province of The Netherlands, over a hundred-year period. This book is useful for labour historians, economists, sociologists, anthropologists, geographers, and scholars of Dutch or European history.Trade Review"Don Kalb has put labor history back on the cutting edge of methodological innovation."—William M. Reddy, Duke University"Don Kalb has taken a boisterous series of excursions into North Brabant’s modern history and come back with important news concerning ways of understanding economic change, class, and social experience."—Charles Tilly, Columbia University
£27.90
University of Pittsburgh Press The Glass House Boys of Pittsburgh
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£45.95
University of Pittsburgh Press The Steel Workers Pittsburgh series in social labor history
Book SynopsisThe Steel Workers remains a readable and timeless account of labor conditions in the early years of the steel industry. An introduction by the noted historian Roy Lubove places the book in political and historical context.
£49.56
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Development of Human Resource Management
Book SynopsisThis innovative book describes the historical development of human resource management (HRM) in seventeen countries around the world.Trade Review‘This is an excellent book. Bruce Kaufman, in his ever thoughtful way, has not just analyzed the history of the development of HRM, but assembled 17 chapters in which world-class local experts report on that history in their own country. The book is full of fascinating information, stories and analysis and will be a touchstone text for everyone wanting to break out of the usual narrow ethnocentric view that often afflicts studies of HRM.’ -- Chris Brewster, University of Reading, UK‘In summary, this book is disciplined and effective comparative research that meets its stated objectives. The historical evolutions it describes are, in themselves, fascinating. . . It’s quite rightly said that HR professionals should read a definitive text at least annually to prime their thinking for the future, and this book fits that bill.’ -- Geoff De Lacy, Australian Human Resource Institute JournalTable of ContentsContents 1. The Development of Human Resource Management Across Nations: History and Its Lessons for International and Comparative HRM Bruce E. Kaufman 2. A Century of Human Resource Management in Argentina Carlos Aldao-Zapiola 3. Human Resource Management in Australia: Historical Development and Contemporary Tensions Christopher Wright 4. The Historical Evolution of Human Resource Management in Brazil Zilá Guimarães Horta 5. The Evolution of Human Resource Management in China: Traditions, Reforms and Developments Xiangquan Zeng, Liwen Chen, Zhongxing Su 6. The History of Human Resource Management in France Jacques Rojot 7. The History of Human Resource Management in Germany Ruth Rosenberger 8. The Evolution of Human Resource Management in the UK Howard Gospel 9. Human Resource Management in India J.S. Sodhi 10. The Historical Development of human resource management in Israel Itzhak Harpaz 11. The Evolution of Human Resource Management in Italy: An Historical-Institutional Perspective Giovanni Costa and Arnaldo Camuffo 12. Evolution of Human Resource Management in Japan: Continuity, Change, and Enduring Challenges Jong-Won Woo 13. The Development of People Management in South Korea Young-Myon Lee 14. Human resource management in Russia over a Century of Storm and Turmoil: A Tale of Unrealized Dreams. Igor Gurkov, Evgeny Morgunov, Alexander Settles, and Olga Zelenova 15. Human Resource Management in the Republic of South Africa Marius Meyer 16. Employment Regimes and Personnel Work in Sweden Lena Gonäs and Patrik Larsson 17. Human Resource Management in Turkey Lale Tüzüner 18. The Origins, Evolution, and Current Status of Human Resource Management in the United States Bruce E. Kaufman. Index
£159.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Fighting Working Poverty in Postindustrial
Book SynopsisThis thought-provoking book provides an in-depth analysis of the working poor phenomenon and its causes across welfare regimes, and identifies the most efficient policy mixes and best practices that could be utilized to resolve this problem.Trade Review‘This is a very well written study. . . the discussion here of the impact of such policies as tax credits, employment subsidies and childcare support in relation to welfare regime is sophisticated and insightful. One can learn much here about “the interplay of markets (especially the labour market), the welfare state and families”.’ -- Neil Fraser, Journal of Social PolicyTable of ContentsContents: 1. The Dilemmas and Puzzles of the Fight Against Working Poverty 2. Arbitrary Definitions, Official Definitions and Useful Typologies 3. The Three Mechanisms that Lead to Working Poverty 4. Potential Solutions: Minimum Wages, Social Transfers and Childcare Policy 5. The Real World of Social Policies: The Welfare Regime Approach 6. What Works Where and for Whom? A Meta-analytical Approach 7. The Weight of Each Working Poverty Mechanism Across Welfare Regimes 8. There is No Such Thing as ‘the Working Poor’ or a One-Size-Fits-All Solution Appendix: Summary Tables and Data-sets Used for the Meta-analyses References Index
£94.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook of Employment and Society
Book SynopsisThis Handbook deepens and extends the engagement between research concerned with work and employment and labour geography. It links fundamental concepts concerning the politics of place that human geographers have developed in recent years with the world of work.Trade Review’. . . provides valuable analysis and debate. It is clearly of value to students, providing comprehensive coverage of the relevant ground, and to both students and academics familiar with the territory for whom the essays begin to point the way toward future debates, clearly highlighting the necessity of geography to fully understanding work and employment.' -- Oliver Mallett, Industrial Relations Journal'This volume provides a comprehensive overview of the analytical interactions between geography, space, work and employment. Space is not simply a banal backdrop against which work and employment processes and relations operate. Rather, the specific geographical context both colours, and is coloured by, the modes and nature of work and employment taking place in that context. Moreover, these issues are magnified by the tensions between processes operating at the local and global scales. The volume is particularly timely in the light of the recent credit crisis.' -- Philip McCann, University of Groningen, The Netherlands'This Handbook represents a major milestone in the revitalization of scholarship on work and employment. It demonstrates that human geography can - indeed, must - be integrated into labor studies and industrial relations. Our present era may be characterised as global capitalism, but "working space" is a social (and often highly contested) construct and people live and work in a particular place. To drive these points home, the editors weave together contributions highlighting the experience of workers in a wide variety of locations. The result is a volume rich in conceptual and practical insights; it deserves a wide audience.' -- Charles J. Whalen, Utica College and Cornell University, US'This major edited volume from some of the most eminent scholars writing on employment and society is to be welcomed. . . The reader is rewarded with an invaluable volume of excellent work from original empirical research.' -- Jane Holgate, Leeds University, UK in Labor Studies JournalTable of ContentsContents: 1. Foundations Andrew Herod, Susan McGrath-Champ and Al Rainnie PART I: WORK, SPACE AND THE STATE 2. Globalisation and the State Bob Jessop 3. Creating Markets, Contesting Markets: Labour Internationalism and the European Common Transport Policy Peter Turnbull PART II: WORKING SPACES 4. Working Spaces Al Rainnie, Susan McGrath-Champ and Andrew Herod Section 2.1 Regionalisation, Globalisation and Labour 5. Labour Markets from the Bottom Up Jamie Peck and Nik Theodore 6. Clothing Workers after Worker States: The Consequences for Work and Labour of Outsourcing, Nearshoring and Delocalisation in Postsocialist Europe John Pickles and Adrian Smith 7. Tele-mediated Servants and Self-servants of the Global Economy: Labour in the Era of ICT-enabled E-commerce Matthew Zook and Michael Samers 8. Gender, Space and Labour Market Participation: The Experiences of British Pakistani Women Robina Mohammad 9. Filipino Migration and the Spatialities of Labour Market Subordination Philip F. Kelly Section 2.2 Building Space 10. Competing Geographies of Welfare Capitalism and its Workers: Kohler Village and the Spatial Politics of Planned Company Towns Kathryn J. Oberdeck 11. Work, Place and Community in Socialism and Postsocialism Alison Stenning 12. Plastic Palm Trees and Blue Pumpkins: Synthetic Fun and Real Control in Contemporary Space Chris Baldry 13. Dormitory Labour Regimes and the Labour Process in China: New Workers in Old Factory Forms Ngai Pun and Chris Smith PART III: WORKERS IN SPACE 14. Workers in Space Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod and Susan McGrath-Champ Section 3.1 Labour Institutions in Space and Place 15. Global Unions versus Global Capital: Or, the Complexity of Transnational Labour Relations Ronaldo Munck and Peter Waterman 16. Methodological Nationalism and Territorial Capitalism: Mobile Labour and the Challenges to the ‘German Model’ Christian Berndt 17. European Works Councils: From the Local to the Global? Ian Fitzgerald and John Stirling 18. The New Economic Model and Spatial Changes in Labour Relations in Post-NAFTA Mexico Enrique de la Garza Toledo Section 3.2 Organising in Space and Place 19. Contested Space: Union Organising in the Old Economy Bradon Ellem 20. Contesting the New Politics of Space: Labour and Capital in the White Goods Industry in Southern Africa Andries Bezuidenhout and Edward Webster 21. The Multi-scalarity of Trade Union Practice Jeremy Anderson, Paula Hamilton and Jane Wills 22. Working Space and the New Labour Internationalism Rob Lambert and Michael Gillan 23. Online Union Campaigns and the Shrinking Globe: The LabourStart Experience Eric Lee 24. ‘Across the Great Divide’: Local and Global Trade Union Responses to Call Centre Offshoring to India Phil Taylor and Peter Bain PART IV: AFTERWORD 25. Workers, Economies, Geographies Noel Castree Index
£51.25
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Work Inequalities in the Crisis
Book SynopsisWork Inequalities in the Crisis provides an in-depth overview of the effects of the crisis on inequalities in the world of work. An assessment of national trends in 30 European countries precedes case studies of 14 of them, in which noted European specialists report on individual enterprises or sectors.Trade ReviewWho are the losers and the occasional winners in the current economic crisis? How have employers responded to the slump in economic growth? What lessons can be learned both from their and government labour policies? Daniel Vaughan-Whitehead, and a team of leading researchers address these questions applying the latest data and research including company case studies from across Europe, including Turkey and the transition economies. They observe some similarities, but also enormous differences. They find novel answers as the policies developed over the past two decades to foster greater flexibility have altered the way firms respond to market changes. Are all these changes socially desirable? The authors are to be congratulated for providing such a detailed panorama and frank assessment which will be of value to both academic and policy readers. - David Marsden, London School of Economics, UK Since the successive crises erupted the increase in inequality has not been addressed. This important publication offers a comprehensive overview of recent developments in the workplace. It will help to promote a different policy agenda that is desperately needed to overcome the causes and consequences of the crisis, namely addressing work inequalities. --- Philippe Pochet, Catholic University of Louvain la Neuve, Belgium, and General Director of the European Trade Union Institute (ETUI), Brussels, BelgiumTable of ContentsContents: Foreword Maria Helena André Foreword Nicolas Schmit Foreword Guy Ryder 1. Introduction: Has the Crisis Exacerbated Work Inequalities? Daniel Vaughan-Whitehead 2. Mixed Adjustment Forms and Inequality Effects in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania Jaan Masso and Kerly Krillo 3. Inequality at Work Emerging in the Current Crisis in Bulgaria Vasil Tzanov 4. Croatia: Prolonged Crisis with an Uncertain Ending Vojmir Franičević 5. France: Protecting the Insiders in the Crisis and Forgetting the Outsiders? Jérôme Gautié 6. The German Labour Market after the Financial Crisis: Miracle or Just a Good Policy Mix? Gerhard Bosch 7. Hungary: Crisis Coupled with a Fiscal Squeeze – Effects on Inequality János Köllő 8. Italy: Limited Policy Responses and Industrial Relations in Flux, Leading to Aggravated Inequalities Niall O’Higgins 9. The Netherlands: Is the Impact of the Financial Crisis on Inequalities Different from in the Past? Wiemer Salverda 10. From the Highest Employment Growth to the Deepest Fall: Economic Crisis and Labour Inequalities in Spain Rafael Muñoz de Bustillo Llorente and José-Ignacio Antón Pérez 11. Negotiated Flexibility in Sweden: A More Egalitarian Response to the Crisis? Dominique Anxo 12. Crisis in Turkey: Aggravating a Segmented Labour Market and Creating New Inequalities Seyhan Erdoğdu 13. Social Impact of the Crisis in the United Kingdom: Focus on Gender and Age Inequalities Damian Grimshaw and Anthony Rafferty Index
£172.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The International Handbook of Labour Unions
Book SynopsisThis insightful Handbook examines how labour unions across the world have experienced and responded to the growth of neo-liberalism.Trade Review’Gall, Wilkinson, and Hurd have produced an impressive collection of scholarly essays on labour's responses to neoliberalism. The International Handbook of Labour Unions provides policymakers, analysts, academics, researchers, and advanced students a compelling framework and key insights in identifying the dilemmas facing labour in the ages of globalisation. -- Edward Webster, University of the Witwatersrand, South AfricaTable of ContentsContents: 1. Labour Unionism and Neo-liberalism Gregor Gall, Richard Hurd and Adrian Wilkinson 2. Theories of Collective Action and Union Power John Kelly 3. Union Renewal: Objective Circumstances and Social Action Pauline Dibben and Geoffrey Wood 4. Pragmatism, Ideology or Politics? Unions’ and Workers’ Responses to the Imposition of Neo-liberalism in Argentina Maurizio Atzeni and Pablo Ghigliani 5. Neo-liberal Evolution and Union Responses in Australia David Peetz and Janis Bailey 6. Britain: How Neo-liberalism Cut Unions Down to Size John McIlroy 7. Unions in China in a Period of Marketisation Fang Lee Cooke 8. France: Union Responses to Neo-liberalism Sylvie Contrepois 9. German Unions Facing Neo-liberalism: Between Resistance and Accommodation Heiner Dribbusch and Thorsten Schulten 10. India, Neo-liberalism and Union Responses – Unfinished Business and Protracted Struggles Ernesto Noronha and David Beale 11. Russian Unions After Communism: A Study in Subordination Sarah Ashwin 12. Neo-liberalism, Union Responses and the Transformation of the South Korean Labour Movement Dae-oup Chang 13. Unions Facing and Suffering Neo-liberalism in the United States Bob Bruno 14. The Crisis of Neo-liberalism and the American Labour Movement Richard L. Trumka 15. Interaction between Labour Unions and Social Movements in Responding to Neo-liberalism Bill Fletcher Jr 16. Unions, Globalisation and Internationalism: Results and Prospects Ronaldo Munck 17. A Future for the Labour Movement? Lowell Turner Index
£49.35
Cornell University Press The Transformation of American Industrial
Book Synopsis
£29.75
Cornell University Press Perspectives on American Labor History
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£13.29
Temple University Press,U.S. Work Without End
Book SynopsisExamines the period from 1920 to 1940 during which the shorter hour movement ended and the drive for economic expansion through increased work took over. This book traces the political, and social dialogues that changed the American concept of progress from dreams of leisure in which to pursue the higher things in life to an obsession.Trade Review"An extraordinarily informative scholarly history of the debate over working hours from 1920 to 1940."—New York Times Book Review"Work Without End presents a compelling history of the rise and fall of the 40-hour work week, explains bow Americans became trapped in a prison of work that allows little room for family, bobbies or civic participation and suggests bow they can free themselves from relentless overwork. [This book] is a sober reconsideration of a topic that is critical to America’s future. It suggests that progress doesn’t mean much if there is not time for love as well as work, and liberation is an empty achievement if the work it frees one to do is truly without end."—The Washington Post"Hunnicutt, with this excellent book, becomes the first United States historian to examine fully why this momentous change occurred."—The Journal of American HistoryTable of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction 1. The Century of Shorter Hours and Work Reduction 2. The New Economic Gospel of Consumption 3. Leisure for Labor 4. Leisure for Culture and Progress 5. Shorter Hours in the Early Depression 6. FDR Counters Shorter Hours 7. Idleness Reemployed: Public Works and Deficit Spending 8. Social Security and the Fair Labor Standards Act 9. Intellectuals and Reformers Abandon Shorter Hours 10. A Case in Point: Scientists 11. The Age of Work Notes Index
£21.84
The Peterson Institute for International Economics Trade and Income Distribution
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£18.00
The Peterson Institute for International Economics Globalization and the Perceptions of American
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£18.00
The Peterson Institute for International Economics Can Labor Standards Improve Under Globalization
Book Synopsis
£18.86
The Peterson Institute for International Economics The Decline of US Labor Unions and the Role of
Book Synopsis
£15.29