This article focuses on school-leavers who enter employment with a temporary contract in the European context, and examines their probabilities to shift to standard employment or unemployment, and their chances of occupational mobility afterwards. The authors argue that two institutional dimensions of insider–outsider segmentation drive the career progression after a flexible entry: the gap between the regulation of permanent and temporary contracts and the degree of unionization. The analyses show that a disproportionate protection of permanent compared to temporary contracts increases the probability of remaining on a fixed-term contract, whereas the degree of unionization slightly decreases the chance of moving to jobs with higher or low...
"Continuous full-time work is becoming less frequent in modern societies. Instead, flexible forms of...
Temporary forms of employment account for a variable but never trivial share of total employment in ...
There is a perception that temporary employment is rising in Europe but there is little evidence to ...
Item does not contain fulltextThis article focuses on school-leavers who enter employment with a tem...
This article investigates the effects of temporary employment at labour market entry on subsequent i...
Temporary work is common across Europe, especially among young people. Whether temporary employment ...
Temporary work is common across Europe, especially among young people. Whether temporary employment ...
Temporary employment contracts can serve as a bridge into permanent employment or become a trap that...
We examine the ways in which some of the labour market policies and institutions that shape flexibil...
In this article we use comparative micro data for 15 European countries covering the period 1992-200...
'This article uses data from the European Union Labour Force Survey (EULFS) 2004 for a comparative a...
The paper addresses the effects of employment protection legislation on job mobility and status at-t...
Many school-leavers enter the labour market via temporary employment. In this paper we investigate t...
"Continuous full-time work is becoming less frequent in modern societies. Instead, flexible forms of...
In Europe, the consequences of temporary employment are at the centre of a social policy debate abou...
"Continuous full-time work is becoming less frequent in modern societies. Instead, flexible forms of...
Temporary forms of employment account for a variable but never trivial share of total employment in ...
There is a perception that temporary employment is rising in Europe but there is little evidence to ...
Item does not contain fulltextThis article focuses on school-leavers who enter employment with a tem...
This article investigates the effects of temporary employment at labour market entry on subsequent i...
Temporary work is common across Europe, especially among young people. Whether temporary employment ...
Temporary work is common across Europe, especially among young people. Whether temporary employment ...
Temporary employment contracts can serve as a bridge into permanent employment or become a trap that...
We examine the ways in which some of the labour market policies and institutions that shape flexibil...
In this article we use comparative micro data for 15 European countries covering the period 1992-200...
'This article uses data from the European Union Labour Force Survey (EULFS) 2004 for a comparative a...
The paper addresses the effects of employment protection legislation on job mobility and status at-t...
Many school-leavers enter the labour market via temporary employment. In this paper we investigate t...
"Continuous full-time work is becoming less frequent in modern societies. Instead, flexible forms of...
In Europe, the consequences of temporary employment are at the centre of a social policy debate abou...
"Continuous full-time work is becoming less frequent in modern societies. Instead, flexible forms of...
Temporary forms of employment account for a variable but never trivial share of total employment in ...
There is a perception that temporary employment is rising in Europe but there is little evidence to ...