Accueil
Titre : | Work, employment and society, vol. 15, n° 2. - June 2001 |
Type de document : | Bulletin |
Paru le : | 01/06/2001 |
DĂ©pouillements
Article : texte imprimé
It is frequently suggested that working at home will be the future of work for many people in the UK and that trends in this direction are already well underway. This paper examines these claims by analysing data from the Labour Force Survey whi[...]
Article : texte imprimé
Tackling social exclusion is at the heart of current British social policy, yet the concept remains' essentially contested'. Here we report on the transitional experiences (school to work, parental home to independent household, family of origin[...]
Article : texte imprimé
This article draws on data generated in semi-structured interviews to describe changes in social capital in the form of social networks across two generations of male school leavers. The article achieves this by comparing and contrasting the sch[...]
Article : texte imprimé
Belgian policy-makers are coming to regard the Netherlands as a `model'. Belgian observers commenting on the `Dutch miracle' frequently refer to the greater flexibility of the deployment of labour. The share taken by temporary employment is inde[...]
Article : texte imprimé
In recent years, much cross-national research on women's work has focused on the impact of the state in creating the conditions to enable women to combine paid work and motherhood. However, when dealing with women's domestic responsibilities, th[...]
Exemplaires(1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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1037147 | P | PĂ©riodique | CEREQ | BibliothĂšque | Disponible |