JARVIS H. (1997) Housing, labour markets and household structure: questioning the role of secondary data analysis in sustaining the polarization debate, Reg. Studies 31, 521-531. This paper presents a critique of the polarization thesis as it is popularly conceived in Britain. The apparent phenomenon of an increasing divergence of the population into extremes of multi-earner and no-earner households is typically demonstrated using secondary data sources. Consequently, polarization is explained in terms of household employment with regard to earners in a way which overlooks sources of division which emanate from within a variety of household structures. It is posited that the appearance of a polarization of household prospects is manifested,...
Individual and household based aggregate measures of worklessness can, and do, offer conflicting sig...
Employment polarisation in developed countries has been of central focus for research and policy cir...
We document that U.S. employment polarization in the 1980-2008 period is largely generated by women....
Individual and household based aggregate measures of joblessness can, and do, offer conflicting sign...
This paper takes issue with the dominant thesis of social polarisation put forward by Sassen (1991)....
Over the last 30 years the share of individuals in the Belgian working-age population without employ...
This paper explores the link between polarization and inequality and proposes some analytical method...
We document that job polarization -contrary to the consensus- has started as early as the 1950s in t...
Individual and household based aggregate measures of joblessness can, and do, offer conflicting sign...
This thesis investigates the political economy of employment polarization focusing on the implicatio...
In this paper, evidence from Britain and the United States concerning social polarization is compare...
Individual and household based aggregate measures of worklessness can, and do, offer conflicting sig...
Whilst employment levels in Australia are healthy when compared to those twenty years ago, the avail...
The concept of polarization is related to the clustering of individuals forming groups in different ...
The social polarisation hypothesis argues that deindustrialisation causes the polarisation of the oc...
Individual and household based aggregate measures of worklessness can, and do, offer conflicting sig...
Employment polarisation in developed countries has been of central focus for research and policy cir...
We document that U.S. employment polarization in the 1980-2008 period is largely generated by women....
Individual and household based aggregate measures of joblessness can, and do, offer conflicting sign...
This paper takes issue with the dominant thesis of social polarisation put forward by Sassen (1991)....
Over the last 30 years the share of individuals in the Belgian working-age population without employ...
This paper explores the link between polarization and inequality and proposes some analytical method...
We document that job polarization -contrary to the consensus- has started as early as the 1950s in t...
Individual and household based aggregate measures of joblessness can, and do, offer conflicting sign...
This thesis investigates the political economy of employment polarization focusing on the implicatio...
In this paper, evidence from Britain and the United States concerning social polarization is compare...
Individual and household based aggregate measures of worklessness can, and do, offer conflicting sig...
Whilst employment levels in Australia are healthy when compared to those twenty years ago, the avail...
The concept of polarization is related to the clustering of individuals forming groups in different ...
The social polarisation hypothesis argues that deindustrialisation causes the polarisation of the oc...
Individual and household based aggregate measures of worklessness can, and do, offer conflicting sig...
Employment polarisation in developed countries has been of central focus for research and policy cir...
We document that U.S. employment polarization in the 1980-2008 period is largely generated by women....