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The End of Work: The Decline of the Global Labor Force and the Dawn of the Post-Market Era

By: Rifkin, Jeremy.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New York NY, Putnam, 1996Description: 350 pages.ISBN: 0-87477-824-7.Subject(s): changing labor market | technology | technological change | jobs | postindustrial society | unemploymentSummary: Jeremy Rifkin argues that we are entering a new phase in history - one characterized by the steady and inevitable decline of jobs. The world, says Rifkin, is fast polarizing into two potentially irreconcilable forces: on one side, an information elite that controls and manages the high-tech global economy; and on the other, the growing numbers displaced workers, who have few prospects and little hope for meaningful employment in an increasingly automated world. The end of work could mean the demise of civilization as we have come to know it, or signal the beginning of a great social transformation and a rebirth of the human spirit.
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Item type Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode
Monography Library
J2 26 (Browse shelf) Checked out 09.07.2022 00006200

Jeremy Rifkin argues that we are entering a new phase in history - one characterized by the steady and inevitable decline of jobs. The world, says Rifkin, is fast polarizing into two potentially irreconcilable forces: on one side, an information elite that controls and manages the high-tech global economy; and on the other, the growing numbers displaced workers, who have few prospects and little hope for meaningful employment in an increasingly automated world.
The end of work could mean the demise of civilization as we have come to know it, or signal the beginning of a great social transformation and a rebirth of the human spirit.

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Deutsche Post Stiftung
 
Istitute of Labor Economics
 
Institute for Environment & Sustainability
 

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