Index
ISBN: 978-1-78743-288-8, eISBN: 978-1-78743-287-1
ISSN: 0277-2833
Publication date: 19 December 2017
This content is currently only available as a PDF
Citation
(2017), "Index", Kalleberg, A.L. and Vallas, S.P. (Ed.) Precarious Work (Research in the Sociology of Work, Vol. 31), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 463-466. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0277-283320170000031023
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited
INDEX
Alternative work
, 275
Application Program Interface (API)
, 158
Aspiration
, 169–171
Atypical work
, 275
Augmented reality (AR)
, 167
Bad job characteristics
, 143–147
Bad jobs
, 9, 15, 18, 126, 127, 132, 133, 140–143
Basic income
, 24
Best prison job
, 71
Buzz words
, 78
Capitalism
, 7, 9
Career management
, 7, 18, 20
Career trajectories
, 370–371
Casualization
, 132
Cell warriors
, 73
Civic money
, 23
Classification struggles
, 66–69
Classification struggles, concept of
, 63
CMEs. See Coordinated market economies (CMEs)
Constitutional asymmetry
, 35
Contingent work
, 275
Contract uncertainty
, 448–449
Contract work
costs and benefits of
, 431–434
personal lives
, 435–436
transnational settings
, 435–436
Control variables
, 137–138
Cool jobs
, 15
Coordinated market economies (CMEs)
, 246, 278
Coping mechanisms
, 97, 99, 101
Declining public sector employment
, 134
Deindustrialization
, 131
Democratization of insecurity
, 17
Demographics and early careers
, 382–386
Dependent variables
, 135–136, 254
Deregulation (or austerity) policies
, 43
Descriptive statistics
, 139
Early career setbacks
, 369–370
Early career trajectories
, 378–382
Economic policy
, 1
Elite politics
, 341
Employment
, 34, 35
definition of
, 37
deregulation of
, 42
effects on
, 44–46
flexibilization of
, 42
lacks continuity of
, 36
law
, 40
organized labor in
, 37
policy and regulation
, 39
quality of
, 40
relationship
, 37
temporary
, 39
Employment Services
, 137
European Union (EU)
, 35, 40, 43
European workfarism
, 51
European Working Conditions Survey (EWCS)
, 93, 103, 106, 117–118
Facework
, 69
Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
, 223
Finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE)
, 194
Financial planning
, 442–443
Financialization
, 133–134
First marriage
, 405–407, 409–410
Fixed-term employment
, 95, 96
Flexibility
, 438–440
Flexible accumulation
, 9
Flexible labor
, 275
Food factory
, 70
Formal sector workers
, 340
Free knowledge workers
, 94
Full-time homemaker
, 103
Gender inequality
, 186, 189, 199, 205, 208, 216, 217, 221, 228, 236, 237
Gendered organizations
in new economy
, 217–219
German labor market
, 247–250
German Socio-Economic Panel
, 253
Germany’s unemployment
, 246
Global challenge
, 326–329
Globalization
, 133
Good jobs
, 9, 14, 23, 135, 140–143
Great Recession
, 127–130, 143
Hackathons
, 20, 161–164
Hacker subculture
, 160–161
Hard reforms
, 341, 342
Hearst Hackathon
, 166–168
Highly educated and skilled (HES)
, 430
Home-based work
, 317–322
Hypothetical factors
, 100–102
Independent cultural producer challenges
, 73–75
India
descriptive statistics
, 346
identification strategy
, 343–344
labor market and IRS
, 338–343
temporary contract employment
, 344–346
Indignado movement in Spain
, 20
Inequality
, 41, 45, 49
Informal employment
in global south
, 313–316
Inmate laborer challenges
, 71–73
Innovation
, 176–177
Insecure job
, 275
Insecurity culture
, 14, 15
Institutional change
, 260–264
Institutionalized social dialogue
, 340
International contract work
, 442–443
financial planning
, 442–443
romantic relationships
, 444–447
Internet of things (IoT)
, 167
Job instability
, 368–369
Job precarity
, 368–369
Jobless recovery
, 130
Labor circulation pool
, 337
Labor cost
, 354
Labor market
, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 42
Labor market outcomes
, 258–260
Labor market precarity
, 93, 94, 100
Liberal market economies (LMEs)
, 278
Liquid modernity
, 3
LMEs. See Liberal market economies (LMEs)
Macro-economic and economic niche effects
, 386–390
Mancession
, 143
Manufacturing consent
, 161
Manufacturing innovation
, 161
Marketization
, 34, 35
Marriage
, 400, 401, 402
Mass politics
, 341
Metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs)
, 127
Monetary penalties
, 391–393
Morality
, 69
Multi-activity society
, 23
Narratives
, 220
Neoliberalism
, 15
New employment narrative
, 367–368
Non-profit organizations
, 169
Non-worker
, 69
Nonstandard work
, 186–188, 275
Oil industry
, 228, 235
Old economy
, 20
Ontological insecurity
, 3
Organizational logic
, 217
Organized capitalism
, 5
Participative mobilization
, 69
Peripheralization
, 45
Political responses
, 18–22
Political stability
, 1
Post-World War II period
, 2, 23, 128
Power Resource Theory
, 38–39, 275
Precariat
, 7
Precarious nonstandard work
, 192
Precarious work
collective bargaining
, 46–49
conceptualizing and measuring
, 277
conceptualizing precarious work vs. informal employment
, 313–314
consequences of
, 13–18, 34
employment policy
, 49–53
expansion of
, 188–190
and great recession
, 127–130
incentive reinforcement
, 50
institutionalization effects
, 46–53
macro-level predictors of
, 278–284
manifestations and trends
, 9–13
and marriage entry
, 407–408
motivation effect
, 52
precarious nonstandard work
, 192
policy changes and effects
, 54
precarious employment
, 185, 186, 187, 189, 195, 196, 250–253
regime of competition
, 54
social disciplining
, 52
social welfare
, 49–53
understanding
, 36–41
unemployment
, 49–53
work first approach
, 52
work precarity
assessing macro-level predictors of
, 292–296
country differences in
, 289–292
Precarity
, 317–322
Production networks
, 317–322
PRT. See Power resource theory (PRT)
Quality of jobs
, 2
Racial–gender lens
, 186–188
educational attainment and precarity
, 190–191
Recreation and career
, 171–174
Reputation
, 174–176
Reservation wages
, 35
Resume
, 77
Risk society
, 3
Self-deprecating self-promotion
, 222
Self-employment
, 322–326
Semi-formal work
, 62
Sharing economy
, 5
Skill-biased technological change (SBTC)
, 251
Skills
, 78
Social Model
, 41
Social movements
, 18–22
Socio-economic consequences
, 97
Software skills
, 78
Solidarity economy
, 22
Standard employment position
, 352
Structuring structures
, 220
Struggles
classification
, 66–69
for group legitimacy
, 80–81
for nomination
classificatory hierarchy
, 77–78
cross-sector dual employment
, 78–80
industrial citizenship
, 77–80
unionization and solidarity
, 75–77
for personal dignity
, 82–85
Subjective insecurity
, 97–99, 104
Symbolic acts of nomination
, 67
Tacit support
, 279
Tech space
, 158
Temporary employment
, 254
Theoretical foundations
, 3–9
Too-big-to-fail syndrome
, 129
Transportation, communication and public utilities (TCPU)
, 194
Tumbleweed society
, 14
U.S. General Social Survey (GSS)
, 11
Unequal returns to human capital
, 190, 203
Union decline
, 131–132
Universal (or unconditional) basic income (UBI)
, 24
US
foreign direct investment in
, 133
metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs)
, 127
Value imperialism
, 23
Vanishing corporation
, 5
Varieties of capitalism (VoC)
, 38, 275
Venture labor
, 169
Virtual reality (VR)
, 167
Voluntary and involuntary fixed-term jobs
, 97
Women scientists
, 221, 222, 231
Women’s work
, 69
Work ethic
, 71
Work society
, 23
Work transformation
, 217
Work, classification of
, 64–66
Workfare
, 20
Zombie category
, 6
- Prelims
- Probing Precarious Work: Theory, Research, and Politics
- Part I: Theory and Method
- Precarious Work, Regime of Competition, and the Case of Europe
- Classification Struggles in Semi-Formal and Precarious Work: Lessons from Inmate Labor and Cultural Production
- Non-standard employment and subjective insecurity: how can we capture job precarity using survey data?
- Part II: Precarious Work in the United States
- Bad Jobs in a Troubled Economy: The Impact of the Great Recession in America’s Major Metropolitan Areas
- Hackathons as Co-optation Ritual: Socializing Workers and Institutionalizing Innovation in the “New” Economy
- A Racial-Gender Lens on Precarious Nonstandard Employment
- The Gender of Layoffs in the Oil and Gas Industry
- Part III: International Perspectives on Precarious Work
- The Rise of Precarious Employment in Germany
- Precarious Work in Europe: Assessing Cross-National Differences and Institutional Determinants of Work Precarity in 32 European Countries
- Informal Employment in the Global South: Globalization, Production Relations, and “Precarity”
- Determinants Of Precarious Employment In India: An Empirical Analysis
- Part IV: The Consequences of Precarious Work
- Precarious Early Careers: Instability And Timing Within Labor Market Entry
- “Bad Jobs” For Marriage: Precarious Work And The Transition To First Marriage
- “You Don’t Dare Plan Much”: Contract work and personal life for international early-career professionals
- About the Authors
- Index