In this article I present a critical reconstruction of the concept of postfordism, arguing for a regulation-theoretic approach that views Fordism and postfordism not in terms of production models based on a particular labour process but as institutional regimes of competition, within which there are one of four types of generic labour process: high-autonomy, semiautonomous, tightly constrained and unrationalized labour-intensive. I show that over one-third of US employment is in low-autonomy jobs and sketch an analytical framework for analysing job quality. Contrasting the four labour processes with various measures of job quality produces 18 job types that reduce to one of three job quality categories: good jobs, bad jobs and decent jobs. ...
Post-work politics, with a focus on universal basic income, rather than an agenda of saving jo...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor and Francis in Journal of Economic ...
This volume grows out of the research on the United States summarized in Low-Wage America: How Emplo...
I present a Marxist regulationist framework for analyzing job quality, distinguishing between Fordis...
The Fordism/postfordism framework has been widely used, but also heavily criticized, in the social s...
In this article I systematically incorporate empirical work on rising income inequality and wage sta...
The article seeks to reanimate the early regulation theory project of building Marxist political eco...
This article opens by suggesting that the decline in the sociology of work in the UK has been overst...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the role of specific active labour market policies ...
This article introduces readers to the special issue on 'the enactment of neoliberalism in the workp...
My dissertation contributes towards our understanding of the determinants of wage inequality and to ...
This dissertation concerns itself with the negative effects of two structural economic changes in ad...
Workers in the realm of social reproduction – e.g. nurses, carers, cleaners, food preparation worker...
Drawing on 25 qualitative interviews, this paper attends to and critiques neoliberalism to demonstra...
Post-Fordism is a term which has largely been rejected by the Left, mainly on the grounds that it di...
Post-work politics, with a focus on universal basic income, rather than an agenda of saving jo...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor and Francis in Journal of Economic ...
This volume grows out of the research on the United States summarized in Low-Wage America: How Emplo...
I present a Marxist regulationist framework for analyzing job quality, distinguishing between Fordis...
The Fordism/postfordism framework has been widely used, but also heavily criticized, in the social s...
In this article I systematically incorporate empirical work on rising income inequality and wage sta...
The article seeks to reanimate the early regulation theory project of building Marxist political eco...
This article opens by suggesting that the decline in the sociology of work in the UK has been overst...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the role of specific active labour market policies ...
This article introduces readers to the special issue on 'the enactment of neoliberalism in the workp...
My dissertation contributes towards our understanding of the determinants of wage inequality and to ...
This dissertation concerns itself with the negative effects of two structural economic changes in ad...
Workers in the realm of social reproduction – e.g. nurses, carers, cleaners, food preparation worker...
Drawing on 25 qualitative interviews, this paper attends to and critiques neoliberalism to demonstra...
Post-Fordism is a term which has largely been rejected by the Left, mainly on the grounds that it di...
Post-work politics, with a focus on universal basic income, rather than an agenda of saving jo...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor and Francis in Journal of Economic ...
This volume grows out of the research on the United States summarized in Low-Wage America: How Emplo...