How have the immediate school-to-work transition and the early career changed in different labour market entry regimes since the early 1980s? How do institutional frameworks differ with regard to insecurity perception? Ellen Ebralidze investigates these topics from a cross-national perspective while focusing on Denmark, the darling of flexicurity literature. The results show that in all the labour market entry regimes, the school-towork transition has become increasingly difficult, and flexible forms of work are more typical in the first job. Furthermore, the liberal institutional framework of the United States seems to produce a similarly low degree of job-loss worry among young people in their early career as the Danish paradigm.
Social Consequences of Labour Market Marginalisation in Germany : Analysing the Impact of Social Identities and Values
Carlotta Giustozzi
bookSocial Consequences of Labour Market Marginalisation in Germany : Analysing the Impact of Social Identities and Values
Carlotta Giustozzi
bookStudies in Self Culture and Character: A Man's Value to Society
Newell Dwight Hillis
bookGod's Monsters : Vengeful Spirits, Deadly Angels, Hybrid Creatures, and Divine Hitmen of the Bible
Esther Hamori
audiobookGeneration We : The Power and Promise of Gen Z
AnneMarie Hayek
audiobookThe Other Great Game
Sheila Miyoshi Jager
audiobookFixing Social Security
R. Douglas Arnold
audiobookJapan 1941
Eri Hotta
audiobookImperial Germany & the Industrial Revolution : The Economic Rise as a Fuel for Political Radicalism & The Background Origins of WW1
Thorstein Veblen
bookThe Belief in Immortality and the Worship of the Dead : The Belief Among the Aborigines of Australia, New Guinea, Melanesia and Polynesians
James George Frazer
bookThe Olive Branch from Palestine
Jerome M. Segal
audiobookLet Us Dream : The Path to a Better Future
Pope Francis
audiobook