Title: Job quality in Europe
Authors: Burchell, Brendan J.
Smith, Mark
Fagan, Colette
O’Brien, Catherine
Keywords: job quality
EES
EWCS
Issue Date: 2008
Publisher: Industrial Relations Journal
Citation: Burchell, Brendan J., Mark, Smith, Colette, Fagan, and Catherine, O’Brien. "Job quality in Europe" Industrial Relations Journal 39:6 (2008): 585–602.
Series/Report no.: 39:6
Abstract: Promoting job quality and gender equality are objectives of the European Employment Strategy (EES) in spite of a downgrading of the attention given to both in the revised employment guidelines and the re-launch of the Lisbon Process. However, advances on both of these objectives may be important complements to the employment rate targets of the EES, as access to good quality jobs for both sexes is likely to help sustain higher employment rates. While the European Commission has a broad view of the concept of job quality in practice, it relies on a selection of labour market type indicators that say little about the quality of the actual jobs people do. Using data from the 2005 European Working Conditions survey, we analyse job quality along three dimensions: job content, autonomy and working conditions. We conclude that gender and occupational status, along with other job characteristics such as working time and sector, have more influence on an individual’s job quality than the country or ‘national model’ they are situated in. Our results also demonstrate the value of developing indicators of job quality that are both gender sensitive and derived at the level of the job rather than the labour market in order to advance EU policy and academic debate on this topic.
URI: http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/242164
ISSN: 0019-8692
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - Sociology

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