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Titre : | Occupational licensing versus company-led traing. The controversy over the competence assurance system for European aircraft technicians. (2008) |
Auteurs : | Joachim Haas |
Type de document : | Article : texte imprimé |
Dans : | EUROPEAN SOCIETIES (vol. 10 - n° 4, 2008) |
Article en page(s) : | pp. 597-617 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Catégories : |
Thésaurus CEREQ CERTIFICATION ; FORMATION PROFESSIONNELLE EN ENTREPRISE ; POLITIQUE EUROPEENNE ; QUALIFICATION ; RELATIONS PROFESSIONNELLES ; UNION EUROPEENNE ; AGENT DE MAINTENANCE ; INDUSTRIE AERONAUTIQUE ; EUROPE |
Résumé : | The paper provides an analysis of the major controversy which occurred between national aviation authorities during their work on the European harmonization of the aircraft technicians' competence. The debate focused on the institutional method to assure the high skills level required for that profession : should Europe introduce a system of personnel licensing or a system of company-led training ? Should competence assurance and monitoring be assigned to the aviation authority or should these responsibilities be delegated to approved companies ? A series of 20 extensive interviews with aviation stakeholders in France, Germany and the United Kingdom showed : (i) the company training option highlights the fact that "organization" is a traditional strategy for competence assurance in high-reliability contexts (like aircraft maintenance), the other main alternatives being occupational regulation and sorting by well-informed markets. (ii) The quality recognition required for the international outsourcing of safety-critical services favours the licensing system. In contrast to licensing, the design of the company training system fails to generate the transparency and trust necessary to reassure foreign customers. (iii) Both systems of competence assurance are densely intertwined with specific industrial relation patterns and vested interests. The distortion of these - national or local - equilibriums by European harmonization encounters strong opposition from the industry and/or unions. (résumé auteur) |