A discourse of employability saturates the Higher Education sector in the UK. Government and employers call on universities to produce employable graduates who are attractive to the labour market and can sustain their future marketability by taking responsibility for protean self-development. While the neoliberal assumptions behind this call have attracted robust critique, the extent to which employers shape graduating students’ subjectivities and sense of worth as (potentially employable) workers has escaped scrutiny. Inspired by Foucauldian analyses of Human Resource Management (HRM) practices, this article examines employers’ graduate careers websites and explores the discursive construction of the ‘employable graduate’. The article cont...
Increasingly governments expect universities to improve graduate employment outcomes. Universities r...
Graduate employability remains high on the political agenda. Currently, a strong policy drive to ref...
Two dominant rationales are offered by UK policymakers for the continued expansion of higher educati...
Graduate employment programmes offer university students the prospect of a reasonable salary and dev...
This chapter considers what is meant by employability, provides an overview of the main dimensions, ...
This article aims to understand predictors of objective (i.e., job offers, employment status and emp...
The main aim of the study was to investigate the extent to which business education enabled graduate...
This paper focuses on the representation of the notion of employability and the job-seeking ‘reality...
In todays so-called knowledge economy, skills policies in the UK and the 'new' career discourse assu...
Significant expansions in higher education over the last few decades have raised concerns about an o...
Increasingly governments expect universities to improve graduate employment outcomes. Universities r...
In the UK, the skills agenda continues to dominate Higher Education (HE) policy (Leitch, 2006, Holme...
Tristram Hooley, head of research at iCeGS, presents the findings of a first-of-its-kind literature r...
Over the last few decades there has been strong debate over the central mission of higher education ...
© 2017 Brian Towers (BRITOW) and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. The purpose of this paper is to enrich the c...
Increasingly governments expect universities to improve graduate employment outcomes. Universities r...
Graduate employability remains high on the political agenda. Currently, a strong policy drive to ref...
Two dominant rationales are offered by UK policymakers for the continued expansion of higher educati...
Graduate employment programmes offer university students the prospect of a reasonable salary and dev...
This chapter considers what is meant by employability, provides an overview of the main dimensions, ...
This article aims to understand predictors of objective (i.e., job offers, employment status and emp...
The main aim of the study was to investigate the extent to which business education enabled graduate...
This paper focuses on the representation of the notion of employability and the job-seeking ‘reality...
In todays so-called knowledge economy, skills policies in the UK and the 'new' career discourse assu...
Significant expansions in higher education over the last few decades have raised concerns about an o...
Increasingly governments expect universities to improve graduate employment outcomes. Universities r...
In the UK, the skills agenda continues to dominate Higher Education (HE) policy (Leitch, 2006, Holme...
Tristram Hooley, head of research at iCeGS, presents the findings of a first-of-its-kind literature r...
Over the last few decades there has been strong debate over the central mission of higher education ...
© 2017 Brian Towers (BRITOW) and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. The purpose of this paper is to enrich the c...
Increasingly governments expect universities to improve graduate employment outcomes. Universities r...
Graduate employability remains high on the political agenda. Currently, a strong policy drive to ref...
Two dominant rationales are offered by UK policymakers for the continued expansion of higher educati...