ABSTRACT

The growth in part-time employment has been one of the most striking features in industrialized economies over the past forty years. Part-Time Prospects presents for the first time a systematically comparative analysis of the common and divergent patterns in the use of part-time work in Europe, America and the Pacific Rim. It brings together sociologists and economists in this wide-ranging and comprehensive survey. It tackles such areas as gender issues, ethnic questions and the differences between certain national economies including low pay, pensions and labour standards.

chapter 1|32 pages

CONCEPTUALISING PART-TIME WORK

The value of an integrated comparative perspective
ByColette Fagan and Jacqueline O’Reilly

part |2 pages

Part I WHO WANTS PART-TIME WORK AND ON WHAT CONDITIONS?

chapter 2|22 pages

WHERE AND WHY IS PART-TIME WORK GROWING IN EUROPE?

ByMark Smith, Colette Fagan, Jill Rubery

chapter 3|20 pages

WHEN DO MEN WORK PART-TIME?

ByLei Delsen

chapter 4|19 pages

WHY DON’T MINORITY ETHNIC WOMEN IN BRITAIN WORK PART-TIME?

ByAngela Dale, Clare Holdsworth

chapter 5|20 pages

ARE PART-TIME JOBS BETTER THAN NO JOBS?

ByUlrich Walwei

chapter 6|21 pages

Are benefits a disincentive to work part-time? MARCO DOUDEIJNS

ByMarco Doudeijns

chapter 7|19 pages

PART-TIME WORK

A threat to labour standards?
ByJill Rubery

chapter 8|19 pages

HOW DOES PART-TIME WORK LEAD TO LOW PENSION INCOME?

ByJay Ginn, Sara Arber

part |2 pages

Part II INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES

chapter 10|15 pages

WHY IS PART-TIME WORK SO LOW IN PORTUGAL AND SPAIN?

ByMargarida Ruivo, Maria do Pilar and José M.Varejão

chapter 12|20 pages

WHAT IS THE NATURE OF PART-TIME WORK IN THE UNITED STATES AND JAPAN?

BySusan Houseman, Machiko Osawa

chapter 13|13 pages

WHY IS THE PART-TIME RATE HIGHER IN JAPAN THAN IN SOUTH KOREA?

ByAkira Wakisaka, Haesun Bae