Young adults in Australia, and in many other advanced countries, are more likely to be highly educated but less likely to be in full-time employment than their parents were. Although insecure employment has long been a feature of labour markets, increased labour flexibility in recent decades has resulted in insecure employment becoming entrenched. In this article, we draw on data from young people in their early twenties to examine the interrelationships between work and life. Although we focus on the association between precarious employment and sense of personal control, we also examine the interrelationships between sense of personal control, education, relationships and health. Rather than experiencing a short period of insecure employm...
As transitions from school to further education, training or work have become more unpredictable, an...
This article describes an investigation of the relationships between employment status, engagement i...
This article uses qualitative data from a study of young adults aged 20-34 in Bristol to explore the...
Young adults in Australia, and in many other advanced countries, are more likely to be highly educat...
Responses to the rise of insecure work are complicated by claims that emerging generations place les...
Abstract Young people form a unique sector to be analysed in the labour market. The age group known ...
Work and family trends have changed significantly in Australia over past decades, with delays in mar...
Available online 23 May 2019Young adults in the transition from education to employment are vulnerab...
Rapid political-economic changes in recent decades have led to increasingly insecure youth labour ma...
Extensive social-structural changes in Western, industrialised societies over the past half-century,...
While research on adolescent occupational expectations is voluminous, it either ignores students who...
The paper examines young adults’ perspectives on and experiences of job insecurity, including both o...
Objective: This article questions an assumption that modern young adults are unwilling to grow up, d...
This chapter investigates the link between uncertainty in the labour market and young adults’ autono...
Arnett (2000a) recently proposed a new phase in the lifespan called Emerging Adulthood. Taking place...
As transitions from school to further education, training or work have become more unpredictable, an...
This article describes an investigation of the relationships between employment status, engagement i...
This article uses qualitative data from a study of young adults aged 20-34 in Bristol to explore the...
Young adults in Australia, and in many other advanced countries, are more likely to be highly educat...
Responses to the rise of insecure work are complicated by claims that emerging generations place les...
Abstract Young people form a unique sector to be analysed in the labour market. The age group known ...
Work and family trends have changed significantly in Australia over past decades, with delays in mar...
Available online 23 May 2019Young adults in the transition from education to employment are vulnerab...
Rapid political-economic changes in recent decades have led to increasingly insecure youth labour ma...
Extensive social-structural changes in Western, industrialised societies over the past half-century,...
While research on adolescent occupational expectations is voluminous, it either ignores students who...
The paper examines young adults’ perspectives on and experiences of job insecurity, including both o...
Objective: This article questions an assumption that modern young adults are unwilling to grow up, d...
This chapter investigates the link between uncertainty in the labour market and young adults’ autono...
Arnett (2000a) recently proposed a new phase in the lifespan called Emerging Adulthood. Taking place...
As transitions from school to further education, training or work have become more unpredictable, an...
This article describes an investigation of the relationships between employment status, engagement i...
This article uses qualitative data from a study of young adults aged 20-34 in Bristol to explore the...