This article examines how Dutch and British students socially construct the positional competition for jobs within their educational and labour market contexts. The findings illustrate two contrasting approaches to employability. The competition for jobs as understood by the Dutch students is based on absolute performance, an unclear relationship between skills and the labour market, and the development of human capital in areas of experiences, skills and abilities. For the British students it is based on relative performance, ranking of candidates and the importance of signals. The study also shows that these principles are aligned to national labour market and educational contexts. These results highlight the importance of the institution...
textabstractThis article compares and contrasts the nature of student employment experience in Amste...
In 2011, the UK White Paper 'Opening Doors, Breaking Barriers: A Strategy for Social Mobility' recog...
The paper compares the early employment experiences of graduates from the shorter UK bachelors degre...
This article examines how Dutch and British students socially construct the positional competition f...
This thesis examined the early labour market experiences of graduates from different class backgroun...
Since the beginning of the 1980s students' labour market participation in the Netherlands has increa...
Since the beginning of the 1980s students' labour market participation in the Netherlands has increa...
Traditionally theorists who have written about agency and structure have eschewed empirical research...
Since the beginning of the 1980s students' labour market participation in the Netherlands has increa...
Since the beginning of the 1980s students' labour market participation in the Netherlands has increa...
There has been a large expansion of the higher education sector in the past two and a half decades. ...
Significant expansions in higher education over the last few decades have raised concerns about an o...
This article examines the impact of social origin on tertiary graduates’ labour market outcomes in G...
We test whether in Great Britain the recent increase in the supply of university graduates has a neg...
Significant expansions in higher education over the last few decades have raised concerns about an o...
textabstractThis article compares and contrasts the nature of student employment experience in Amste...
In 2011, the UK White Paper 'Opening Doors, Breaking Barriers: A Strategy for Social Mobility' recog...
The paper compares the early employment experiences of graduates from the shorter UK bachelors degre...
This article examines how Dutch and British students socially construct the positional competition f...
This thesis examined the early labour market experiences of graduates from different class backgroun...
Since the beginning of the 1980s students' labour market participation in the Netherlands has increa...
Since the beginning of the 1980s students' labour market participation in the Netherlands has increa...
Traditionally theorists who have written about agency and structure have eschewed empirical research...
Since the beginning of the 1980s students' labour market participation in the Netherlands has increa...
Since the beginning of the 1980s students' labour market participation in the Netherlands has increa...
There has been a large expansion of the higher education sector in the past two and a half decades. ...
Significant expansions in higher education over the last few decades have raised concerns about an o...
This article examines the impact of social origin on tertiary graduates’ labour market outcomes in G...
We test whether in Great Britain the recent increase in the supply of university graduates has a neg...
Significant expansions in higher education over the last few decades have raised concerns about an o...
textabstractThis article compares and contrasts the nature of student employment experience in Amste...
In 2011, the UK White Paper 'Opening Doors, Breaking Barriers: A Strategy for Social Mobility' recog...
The paper compares the early employment experiences of graduates from the shorter UK bachelors degre...