Labor Market Segmentation and Political Participation
Labor market segmentation is a defining feature of advanced industrial democracies. Workers experience different levels of labor risks and protections, with those in secure employment enjoying statutory entitlements and social ben...
ver más
¿Tienes un proyecto y buscas un partner? Gracias a nuestro motor inteligente podemos recomendarte los mejores socios y ponerte en contacto con ellos. Te lo explicamos en este video
Proyectos interesantes
DER2009-13204
MEDIDAS DE EMPLEO ANTE LA CRISIS EMPRESARIAL
33K€
Cerrado
DER2013-48120-C3-2-P
JUVENTUD Y EXPERIENCIA EN EL FOMENTO DEL EMPLEO Y DEL EMPREN...
19K€
Cerrado
ECO2013-46516-C4-2-R
POBREZA, DESIGUALDAD Y SEGREGACION: NUEVOS METODOS, NUEVA EV...
16K€
Cerrado
ECO2013-43526-R
CRISIS ECONOMICA Y BIENESTAR SOCIAL: SALUD, EDUCACION Y MERC...
52K€
Cerrado
DER2013-46905-P
REPENSAR LA SEGURIDAD SOCIAL ANTE LA CRISIS DEL EMPLEO
16K€
Cerrado
CSO2013-47994-R
INSTITUCIONES DEL MERCADO DE TRABAJO Y CRISIS: TENDENCIAS Y...
28K€
Cerrado
Información proyecto LABOREP
Duración del proyecto: 41 meses
Fecha Inicio: 2017-03-06
Fecha Fin: 2020-08-31
Fecha límite de participación
Sin fecha límite de participación.
Descripción del proyecto
Labor market segmentation is a defining feature of advanced industrial democracies. Workers experience different levels of labor risks and protections, with those in secure employment enjoying statutory entitlements and social benefits while the low-paid, insecurely employed, underemployed and long-term unemployed do not. During the recent economic recession, the process of labor market segmentation has hastened, reaching unprecedented levels of differentiated labor risks. Apart from the consequences of segmentation on social and economic inclusiveness and on long-term economic growth potential, segmentation has important but neglected implications for political inclusion and representation. LABOREP aims to fill this gap by examining how labor market inequalities shape political mobilization.
The Action traces how workers across labor divides participate in politics and how the recent economic recession and its aftermath have affected political participation across labor segments. To do so, LABOREP exploits variation in the impact of the economic recession across over 70 Barcelona neighborhoods and over the course of the economic recession in Spain (using three original datasets collected by the host), a country that represents an ideal laboratory for the study of segmentation.
Apart from testing a set of original theses that further our understanding of theories of participation in politics, LABOREP develops a novel methodological approach to account for labor risk differentials within the same categories of work across countries and over time. Such differentials have hindered effective cross-national research on segmentation. The approach makes a contribution to the study of labor segmentation across the disciplines of economics, sociology and political science.
The theory and method gaps along with the increasing economic relevance of segmentation suggest that LABOREP has identified a topic ripe for empirical investigation and of substantial policy relevance.