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2by Werner Eichhorst Paul Marx Verena Tobsch Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...Germany used to be perceived as a country with modest employment levels but high equality in the labour market. However, it is now widely acknowledged that the...”
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3by Werner Eichhorst Paul Marx Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...Few would disagree that European labour markets are in a process of deep transformation. An important element of this transformation is the twin-process of...”
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4by Maarten Keune Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...Non-standard employment, including fixed-term contracts, temporary agency work, (dependent) self-employment and (marginal) part-time contracts, has been on the...”
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5by Marius R. Busemeyer Kathleen Thelen Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...The guiding research question of the volume is ‘why does the share of flexible and/or cheap employment differ across occupations?’ (Eichhorst and Marx in this...”
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6by Janine Leschke Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...Increasing female labour market participation is arguably one of the decisive factors in explaining the rising shares of non-standard employment in European...”
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7by Heejung Chung Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...One of the most substantial societal issues to have been raised over the years is that of the rise in insecurity, exacerbated by the recent financial crisis...”
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8by Oscar Molina Pedro López-Roldán Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...Post-industrial theories have analysed the development of labour markets in the context of service sector expansion and have tried to understand the...”
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9by Ruud Muffels Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...The trend of flexibilisation at the margins, the ultimate consequence of increased international competition and globalisation, is in the literature associated...”
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10by Anne C. Gielen Trudie Schils Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...The Netherlands is known as a country with a high share of atypical work, largely due to a high incidence of part-time workers. Over the last decades, the...”
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11by Fabio Berton Matteo Richiardi Stefano Sacchi Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...Employment in Italy grew for more than ten years beginning in the mid-1990s and continuing to the outburst of the economic crisis in 2008. This period also...”
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12by Alison Koslowski Caitlin McLean Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...The UK labour market has undergone a series of structural changes during the past 40 years, in line with global trends (e.g. Crouch, 1999; Mau and Verwiebe,...”
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13by Martina Dieckhoff Vanessa Gash Antje Mertens Laura Romeu-Gordo Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...Atypical employment comprises ‘any type of employment that is not fulltime and permanent with a single direct employer’ (Hevenstone, 2010: 315). Employment on...”
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14by Moira Nelson Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...While the United States labour market is widely considered the most flexible in the industrialized world, the standard employment relationship still constrains...”
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15by Per K. Madsen Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...Denmark has in the last decade been portrayed as one of the foremost real-life examples of flexicurity. In Denmark, a flexible labour market is combined with...”
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16by Baptiste Françon Paul Marx Published in Non-Standard Employment in Post-Industrial Labour Markets (27.03.2015)“...In the context of this volume, France is a particularly interesting case. Scholars of social inequality have noted that it is something of an exception. As...”
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