In the context of the continuance of mass high unemployment in the United Kingdom and considerable debate concerning the 'real level' of unemployment, the authors of this paper go beyond the official unemployment rate by focusing on the development of alternative indicators of labour reserve in the regions of the United Kingdom. They show how, on a step by-step basis, successively 'broader' indicators of labour reserve (more specifically, those on government training schemes, various categories of those conventionally defined as economically inactive who would like a job, and those in part-time work because they could not find full-time employment) may be derived by means of data from the Labour Force Survey. They then go on to outline the ...
Taulbut M. and Robinson M. The chance to work in Britain: matching unemployed people to vacancies in...
ABSTRACT: There has been a growing awareness that the issue of labour market disadvantage is substan...
This article argues that the scale of unemployment in the UK, and the differences between regions, a...
This paper provides an overview of selected issues pertinent to an examination of comparative experi...
One of the most significant set of papers to come out of the portfolio of Regional Studies Associati...
There has been much discussion recently of unemployment as a dynamic phenomenon; with substantial fl...
The low levels of unemployment recorded in the UK in recent years are widely cited asevidence of the...
This paper surveys analysis of the relationship between regional unemployment and labour mobility in...
The unemployment rate is commonly assumed to measure labour availability, but this ignores the fact ...
This chapter provides an evaluative overview of selected key features of continuity and change in th...
Abstract This paper argues that British ‘welfare to work ’ policies are inadequate given the geograp...
Abstract. What we achieve and what we contribute are not independent of the level of demand for labo...
The paper uses Department of Employment data, the New Earnings, General Household and Labour Force S...
This paper argues that British ‘welfare to work’ policies are inadequate given the geographical conc...
There has been a growing awareness that the issue of labour market disadvantage is substantially gre...
Taulbut M. and Robinson M. The chance to work in Britain: matching unemployed people to vacancies in...
ABSTRACT: There has been a growing awareness that the issue of labour market disadvantage is substan...
This article argues that the scale of unemployment in the UK, and the differences between regions, a...
This paper provides an overview of selected issues pertinent to an examination of comparative experi...
One of the most significant set of papers to come out of the portfolio of Regional Studies Associati...
There has been much discussion recently of unemployment as a dynamic phenomenon; with substantial fl...
The low levels of unemployment recorded in the UK in recent years are widely cited asevidence of the...
This paper surveys analysis of the relationship between regional unemployment and labour mobility in...
The unemployment rate is commonly assumed to measure labour availability, but this ignores the fact ...
This chapter provides an evaluative overview of selected key features of continuity and change in th...
Abstract This paper argues that British ‘welfare to work ’ policies are inadequate given the geograp...
Abstract. What we achieve and what we contribute are not independent of the level of demand for labo...
The paper uses Department of Employment data, the New Earnings, General Household and Labour Force S...
This paper argues that British ‘welfare to work’ policies are inadequate given the geographical conc...
There has been a growing awareness that the issue of labour market disadvantage is substantially gre...
Taulbut M. and Robinson M. The chance to work in Britain: matching unemployed people to vacancies in...
ABSTRACT: There has been a growing awareness that the issue of labour market disadvantage is substan...
This article argues that the scale of unemployment in the UK, and the differences between regions, a...