ABSTRACT

During the last two decades there has been widespread evidence of change in specific aspects of employing organizations, employment and employment related institutions.
Changing Forms of Employment looks at the underlying trends which generate pressures towards a fundamental reshaping of social institutions in three ways: changes in the organization of production, particularly those associated with the growth of service dominated economics; the effects of technological change, particularly those associated with Information Technology; the erosion of the 'male breadwinner' (or single earner) model of employment and household.
These trends have resulted in strains and ruptures in the organization and regulation of employment, and related institutions including trade unions, employers, and households. The task of the next decade is to both reconstruct relationships, and to renew institutions.

part |2 pages

Part I REGULATION, DEREGULATION AND CORPORATIONS

chapter 3|25 pages

TOWARDS THE TRANSNATIONAL COMPANY?

The global structure and organisation of multinational firms

chapter 4|18 pages

FRAGMENTS OF INDUSTRY AND EMPLOYMENT

Contract service work and the shift towards precarious employment

part |2 pages

Part II

chapter 6|24 pages

THE SOCIAL CONSTITUTION OF LABOUR MARKETS

Why skills cannot be commodities

chapter 9|23 pages

WORK ORGANISATION, SKILLS DEVELOPMENT AND UTILISATION OF ENGINEERS

A British-Japanese comparison

part |2 pages

Part III CHANGE IN GENDER RELATIONS

chapter 10|28 pages

CHECKING OUT AND CASHING UP

The prospects and paradoxes of regulating part-time work in Europe

chapter 11|24 pages

THE TRAILING WIFE: A DECLINING BREED?

Careers, geographical mobility and household conflict in Britain 1970–89

chapter 12|19 pages

WOMEN AND MEN MANAGERS

Careers and equal opportunities