Employers often have preferences with respect to workers based on group-level characteristics including geographical origin, gender, class, race, age, family status, appearance, etc. These ‘hiring queues’ can shape recruitment and promotion decisions and explain why certain characteristics may be more or less common within a workplace and across a sector. Drawing on one rural industry known in particular for low-wage and seasonal employment – the strawberry industry – this paper compares employer hiring queues in the US, Norway and UK. We find variety in the hierarchies that employers construct: US, Norwegian and UK strawberry growers recruit their low-wage workers from different nationalities. However, the underlying basis for these hiring...
This article explores how social status and the exploitability of ethnic groups interplays with how ...
There is considerable academic and policy interest in how immigrants fare in the labour markets of t...
are grateful to two anonymous referees for helpful comments and to Howard Bouis for making the data ...
Employers often have preferences with respect to workers based on group-level characteristics includ...
The paper argues that a clear migrant–local hiring queue has emerged at the bottom of the UK labour ...
Immigrants are often concentrated in particular, often low-waged, segments of the labour market and ...
The forest berry industry in northern Sweden operates within a competitive global market for nutriti...
Low-wage migrant workers have been widely studied because of the value they appear to bring to emplo...
This article examines the creation of informal workplace hierarchies in the context of recent change...
Despite the large degree of plant-specific heterogeneity in turnover patterns recently found in the ...
While sociologists have shown how employers contribute to occupational segregation along lines of ra...
This article explores the relationship between labor market discrimination, stereotypes and employer...
Ethnic minorities fare less well on average in the labour market than their white British counterpar...
Information asymmetry regarding local job prospects, imperfect portability of qualifications and a l...
Ethnic minorities fare less well on average in the labour market than their white British counterpar...
This article explores how social status and the exploitability of ethnic groups interplays with how ...
There is considerable academic and policy interest in how immigrants fare in the labour markets of t...
are grateful to two anonymous referees for helpful comments and to Howard Bouis for making the data ...
Employers often have preferences with respect to workers based on group-level characteristics includ...
The paper argues that a clear migrant–local hiring queue has emerged at the bottom of the UK labour ...
Immigrants are often concentrated in particular, often low-waged, segments of the labour market and ...
The forest berry industry in northern Sweden operates within a competitive global market for nutriti...
Low-wage migrant workers have been widely studied because of the value they appear to bring to emplo...
This article examines the creation of informal workplace hierarchies in the context of recent change...
Despite the large degree of plant-specific heterogeneity in turnover patterns recently found in the ...
While sociologists have shown how employers contribute to occupational segregation along lines of ra...
This article explores the relationship between labor market discrimination, stereotypes and employer...
Ethnic minorities fare less well on average in the labour market than their white British counterpar...
Information asymmetry regarding local job prospects, imperfect portability of qualifications and a l...
Ethnic minorities fare less well on average in the labour market than their white British counterpar...
This article explores how social status and the exploitability of ethnic groups interplays with how ...
There is considerable academic and policy interest in how immigrants fare in the labour markets of t...
are grateful to two anonymous referees for helpful comments and to Howard Bouis for making the data ...