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Working-Time Changes: Social Integration Through Transitional Labour Markets

By: O'Reilly, Jacqueline (ed.) | Cebrián, Inmaculada (ed.) | Lallement, Michel (ed.).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Labour Markets and Employment Policy. Publisher: Cheltenham et al., Edward Elgar, 2000Description: 369 pages.ISBN: 1-8406-4280-7.Subject(s): employment policy | full employment | hours of work | Europe | labor markets | working time flexibility | Spain | Sweden | Ireland | Germany | United Kingdom | France | the NetherlandsOnline resources: Publisher's website Summary: Drawing on both quantitative longitudinal panel study data and qualitative case study material, the authors (whose expertise is drawn from the fields of economics, sociology and law) provide an original perspective on the nature and implications of Transitional Labour Markets in Spain, Sweden, Ireland, Britain, Germany, France and The Netherlands. Over the past twenty years European labour markets have seen the simultaneous rise of unemployment and working-time flexibility. While unemployment generates widespread concern about social exclusion, the reorganisation of flexible working-time has been greeted with more ambivalence. The concept of Transitional Labour Markets (TLMs) is an attempt to address and analyse the factors and policies that can prevent high levels of unemployment and exclusion from paid work. This book addresses three key questions: • Can working-time flexibility integrate more people into paid employment? • Can working-time flexibility prevent unemployment? • Is it possible for the barriers between core and peripheral employment to become more permeable in the way advocated by the concept of TLMs? Drawing on both quantitative longitudinal panel study data and qualitative case study material, the authors (whose expertise is drawn from the fields of economics, sociology and law) provide an original perspective on the nature and implications of TLMs in Spain, Sweden, Ireland, Britain, Germany, France and The Netherlands. This will be essential reading for both academics and policymakers in the field of labour market policy.
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Drawing on both quantitative longitudinal panel study data and qualitative case study material, the authors (whose expertise is drawn from the fields of economics, sociology and law) provide an original perspective on the nature and implications of Transitional Labour Markets in Spain, Sweden, Ireland, Britain, Germany, France and The Netherlands.

Over the past twenty years European labour markets have seen the simultaneous rise of unemployment and working-time flexibility. While unemployment generates widespread concern about social exclusion, the reorganisation of flexible working-time has been greeted with more ambivalence. The concept of Transitional Labour Markets (TLMs) is an attempt to address and analyse the factors and policies that can prevent high levels of unemployment and exclusion from paid work.

This book addresses three key questions:

• Can working-time flexibility integrate more people into paid employment?
• Can working-time flexibility prevent unemployment?
• Is it possible for the barriers between core and peripheral employment to become more permeable in the way advocated by the concept of TLMs?

Drawing on both quantitative longitudinal panel study data and qualitative case study material, the authors (whose expertise is drawn from the fields of economics, sociology and law) provide an original perspective on the nature and implications of TLMs in Spain, Sweden, Ireland, Britain, Germany, France and The Netherlands. This will be essential reading for both academics and policymakers in the field of labour market policy.

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