This paper examines employment-related training programmes offered by state funded agencies and multinational corporations in Toronto (Canada) and Kolkata (India). In recent years both cities have witnessed a rise in the service sector industries aligned with global regimes of flexible work and the consequent reinvention of a worker subject that is no longer disciplined according to the needs of industrial production. A worker must now be self-regulated, competitive, flexible, with an ability to convey an urbane, English-speaking deportment within the workplace. Training of employees, especially soft skill training becomes crucial in this connection as a form of technology for achieving this end. Based on Martin Heidegger’s conceptualisatio...
This research roundtable focuses on the lives and experiences of immigrant women in the context of t...
New technologies and new forms of work organisation have prompted the adoption by corporate, nationa...
The paper analyzes the relevance of the three constituent elements of the ‘new firm paradigm’, i.e....
This paper examines employment-related training programmes offered by state funded agencies and mult...
In the current post-Fordist, neoliberal Canadian state, the concept of the ‘enterprising self’ has c...
Since the 1990s there has been a growing need to develop workers who are entrepreneurial and adept i...
This paper explores the historical and ideological contestations over the meaning, nature and scope ...
Since the 1990s, training programs for service-sector jobs have proliferated in India. Frequently re...
In the current Canadian neoliberal labour market, work-related learning and training are considered ...
firms* Saraswati Raju** Issues relating to skill and training acquisition amongst workers are once a...
There has been renewed interest in recent years in education and training as instruments for economi...
The literature on the changing world of work in the age of disruptive technologies is growing, demon...
Drawing on the concept of aesthetic labour, this article examines how skill training programmes in t...
progr ams are the most common acti ve labor market interventions around the w orld. Whether designed...
Once a popular buzzword for multinational corporations, ‘professionalism’ has now become a common ca...
This research roundtable focuses on the lives and experiences of immigrant women in the context of t...
New technologies and new forms of work organisation have prompted the adoption by corporate, nationa...
The paper analyzes the relevance of the three constituent elements of the ‘new firm paradigm’, i.e....
This paper examines employment-related training programmes offered by state funded agencies and mult...
In the current post-Fordist, neoliberal Canadian state, the concept of the ‘enterprising self’ has c...
Since the 1990s there has been a growing need to develop workers who are entrepreneurial and adept i...
This paper explores the historical and ideological contestations over the meaning, nature and scope ...
Since the 1990s, training programs for service-sector jobs have proliferated in India. Frequently re...
In the current Canadian neoliberal labour market, work-related learning and training are considered ...
firms* Saraswati Raju** Issues relating to skill and training acquisition amongst workers are once a...
There has been renewed interest in recent years in education and training as instruments for economi...
The literature on the changing world of work in the age of disruptive technologies is growing, demon...
Drawing on the concept of aesthetic labour, this article examines how skill training programmes in t...
progr ams are the most common acti ve labor market interventions around the w orld. Whether designed...
Once a popular buzzword for multinational corporations, ‘professionalism’ has now become a common ca...
This research roundtable focuses on the lives and experiences of immigrant women in the context of t...
New technologies and new forms of work organisation have prompted the adoption by corporate, nationa...
The paper analyzes the relevance of the three constituent elements of the ‘new firm paradigm’, i.e....