Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 1 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 6 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 19 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 35 |
Descriptor
Job Security | 41 |
Labor Market | 41 |
Foreign Countries | 29 |
Employment Potential | 11 |
Career Development | 9 |
Public Policy | 9 |
Employment Opportunities | 7 |
Employment | 6 |
Unemployment | 6 |
College Graduates | 5 |
Gender Differences | 5 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 41 |
Reports - Research | 21 |
Reports - Evaluative | 11 |
Opinion Papers | 5 |
Reports - Descriptive | 5 |
Tests/Questionnaires | 1 |
Education Level
Higher Education | 15 |
Postsecondary Education | 13 |
Adult Education | 2 |
High Schools | 2 |
Secondary Education | 1 |
Audience
Location
United Kingdom | 5 |
Netherlands | 3 |
Canada | 2 |
Denmark | 2 |
European Union | 2 |
France | 2 |
Germany | 2 |
South Africa | 2 |
Spain | 2 |
Switzerland | 2 |
Argentina (Buenos Aires) | 1 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Earned Income Tax Credit | 1 |
Pell Grant Program | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Crone, Vincent C. A. – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2023
Most of the instructional workforce within the humanities in countries like the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and The Netherlands comprises non-tenure track appointments. This commentary is a starting point in thinking about what the meaning and consequences are of far-reaching casualization for humanities education. Based on my…
Descriptors: Nontenured Faculty, Job Security, College Students, Humanities
Curran, Nathaniel Ming; Jenks, Christopher – Applied Linguistics, 2023
The gig economy is rapidly transforming service-based industries, including online teaching. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic forced millions of people worldwide to work remotely, gig economy teaching generated billions of dollars in revenue and was responsible for millions of lessons per month. Although the global labor market is currently…
Descriptors: Marketing, COVID-19, Pandemics, Entrepreneurship
Nichols, Leslie – Canadian Journal of Educational Administration and Policy, 2023
The market-based imperatives driving economic growth in Western societies have, in ways, both acknowledged and implicit, been used to reorient public institutions - academia dramatically so. This article deals with upending of post-secondary academic hiring priorities, and the impact on the adjunct or sessional lecturers implicated in the change.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Adjunct Faculty, Gender Differences
Panagiotis Arsenis; Miguel Flores – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
We study whether the completion of an optional professional year placement during undergraduate studies enhances job quality, in terms of earnings, job security and career fit, for economics graduates from a UK university. Using linear and discrete choice models, we estimate the effect of doing a professional year placement on four graduate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Economics Education, Work Experience Programs
Kamphuis, Pascal; Glebbeek, Arie C. – International Journal for Research in Vocational Education and Training, 2020
Context: In this study, we attempt to contribute to the scarce evidence about the relationship between perceived labour market insecurity and worker training investments. Drawing on existing research into framing in decision-making, we investigate whether framing the labour market as insecure increases the willingness of workers to invest in…
Descriptors: Job Security, Decision Making, Job Training, Vocational Education
Van Hootegem, Anahí; De Witte, Hans; De Cuyper, Nele; Elst, Tinne Vander – Journal of Career Development, 2019
This study investigates the relationship between job insecurity and the willingness to undertake training, accounting for perceived employability. Drawing on conservation of resources theory, we hypothesize that job insecurity negatively relates to the willingness to participate in training to strengthen the internal and external labor market…
Descriptors: Employees, Employment, Job Security, Career Development
Järvensivu, Anu – Journal of Workplace Learning, 2020
Purpose: Multiple jobholders' workplace learning is an under-researched theme, although it offers possibilities to add knowledge of learning at several workplaces at a time. The purpose of this study is to explore the career development and workplace learning of Finnish multiple jobholders with university degree. Design/methodology/approach: The…
Descriptors: Multiple Employment, Workplace Learning, Career Development, Academic Degrees
Rabossi, Marcelo – Higher Education Policy, 2021
The dual labor market theory (DLM) posited the existence of two distinct labor markets working in parallel. A primary one is a place where high wages, employment stability and high opportunities for advancement are the norms. On the other hand, low wages, arbitrariness and less desirable working conditions determine a secondary market. The main…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Part Time Faculty, Labor Market
Mayernick, Jason – Teachers College Record, 2020
Background/Context: This study deals with an intersection of educational history, queer history, and labor history involving the activities of lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) teachers. The history of LGBT teachers, particularly before the 1990s, has been addressed by only a handful of historians. The prior research most relevant to this study is…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Educational History, Labor Market, Job Security
Ebner, Katharina; Soucek, Roman; Selenko, Eva – Education & Training, 2021
Purpose: This study illuminates the assumption that internships facilitate labor market entry and answers the question of why internships have a positive effect on students' self-perceived employability. It is assumed that internships enable more positive employability perceptions by reducing career-entry worries -- the worries of not finding a…
Descriptors: Internship Programs, Program Effectiveness, Employment Potential, Anxiety
McMahon, Mary; Watson, Mark – South African Journal of Education, 2020
The concept of decent work is intuitively desirable, an ideal to strive for, and a human right. Awareness of the decent work agenda has been raised in career counselling and is posing challenges about what role, if any, career counselling can play towards the achievement of sustainable decent work for all. Feeding into the social justice values of…
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Social Justice, Labor Market, Civil Rights
Lengelle, Reinekke – New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource Development, 2016
This article provides a narrative response to a precariousness labour situation. The question it attempts to answer is: how does one cope with the precariousness and injustices of contemporary employment without becoming pessimistic or hopeless? The piece, based on the author's personal experience, argues that we can tell and write our career…
Descriptors: Job Security, Employment Experience, Labor Conditions, Labor Market
Zhang, Zhixin – International Review of Education, 2016
Due to the effects of globalisation and rapid technological development, traditional linear life course patterns of the past are gradually disappearing, and this affects education and learning systems as well as labour markets. Individuals are forced to develop lifestyles and survival strategies to manage job insecurity and make their skills and…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Global Approach, Comparative Analysis, Job Security
Simmons, Robin; Smyth, John – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2016
This paper uses the Habermasian concept of legitimation crisis to critique the relationship between post-compulsory education and training and the chronic levels of youth unemployment and under-employment which now characterise post-industrial Western economies, such as the UK. It draws on data from an ethnographic study of the lives of young…
Descriptors: Criticism, Employment, Correlation, Ethnography
Leach, Tony – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2017
This paper explores contested notions of the purpose of education and careers work. The research for the paper examines public sector employee reactions to notion of a psychological contract breach, when cuts in funding put their jobs and careers at risk. It argues that, in this environment, the search for career fulfilment can be marked by…
Descriptors: Graduate Surveys, Employment Experience, Employment Potential, Career Guidance