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De Grazia, Raffaele – International Labour Review, 1980
Explores the causes and effects of clandestine and illegal employment, which is therefore unregulated by the authorities, and analyzes the attitudes of those involved. Refers to measures that have been taken to combat the phenomenon, which some regard as beneficial, and which call for further investigation and elucidation. (Editor/ JOW)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employment Practices, Employment Problems, Legal Responsibility
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Kotlyar, Alexander – International Labour Review, 1974
Young workers, persons from sixteen to thirty years old, have problems relating to occupational choice, vocational guidance, vocational training and other educational opportunities, job satisfaction, and housing, complicating their search for an occupational and social identity. (AG)
Descriptors: Employment Problems, Foreign Countries, Self Actualization, Young Adults
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Soete, Luc – International Labour Review, 2001
Analyzes the processes whereby new technologies create opportunities for new markets and increase the need for value-added knowledge work. Suggests that in some sectors information and communications technologies will cause substantial displacement of workers in routine-based jobs. (Contains 46 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Dislocated Workers, Employment Opportunities, Employment Problems, Foreign Countries
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Euzeby, Alain – International Labour Review, 1988
Discusses rules governing social security and their implications for part-time employees in various countries. Topics include (1) methods of financing social security, (2) benefits, (3) measures concerning the unemployed, (4) a floor for employers' contributions, (5) graduated contribution rates, and (6) financial incentives. (CH)
Descriptors: Adults, Comparative Analysis, Employment Problems, Foreign Countries
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Bairoch, Paul – International Labour Review, 1982
This article traces the history of the emergence of large cities and examines the outlook for the future. It then answers questions about the effects of city size on general living conditions and on the various aspects of employment and the ways in which it might develop. (CT)
Descriptors: Employment, Employment Problems, Futures (of Society), Productivity
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Melvyn, P. – International Labour Review, 1977
Deals with some of the problems (and reasons for the problems) which school-leavers and young workers encounter in their search for jobs or training places. Measures taken or envisaged in a number of countries to alleviate the problems are also reviewed. (SH)
Descriptors: Developed Nations, Educational Programs, Educational Responsibility, Employment Practices
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Hansen, Bent; Radwan, Samir – International Labour Review, 1982
To help the unemployment problems of Egypt, the authors recommend the restructuring of agriculture; orientation of investment to foreign-exchange earning export industries; the phasing out of employment guarantees in the public sector combined with educational and training reforms; and contingency employment programs, concentrated on the…
Descriptors: Agriculture, Construction Industry, Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Policy
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Standing, Guy – International Labour Review, 1983
Although it is often claimed that much current unemployment is "structural," the term is potentially misleading because it is poorly defined. The author identifies the following seven major elements in its make-up: changes in industrial structure, skill mismatch, geographical mismatch, demographic shifts, institutional rigidities,…
Descriptors: Economic Change, Economic Factors, Employment Opportunities, Employment Potential
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Klein, E. – International Labour Review, 1983
The conventional approach to analysis of employment problems in the modern sector, namely comparison of workforce supply and demand, is inapplicable in the traditional sector, where a distinction needs to be made between the concepts of workforce underutilization and its availability. The author discusses these concepts and presents their policy…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employment Problems, Human Capital, Labor Economics