Index
Ilias Livanos
(European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training (CEDEFOP), Greece)
Orestis Papadopoulos
(University of Keele, UK)
The Rise of Precarious Employment in Europe
ISBN: 978-1-78754-488-8, eISBN: 978-1-78714-587-0
Publication date: 14 January 2019
This content is currently only available as a PDF
Citation
Livanos, I. and Papadopoulos, O. (2019), "Index", The Rise of Precarious Employment in Europe, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 219-224. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78714-587-020191005
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2019 by Emerald Publishing Limited
INDEX
Alternative work arrangements
, 62
Anglo-Saxon countries
, 81, 96
Anglo-Saxon deregulatory employment practices
, 36
Blue-collar workers
, 39
Boundaryless careers
, 59
Bureau of Labor Statistics
, 62
Capitalist accumulation
, 5
Conservative light
, 81
Contingent Worker Survey
, 62
Contract precariousness
, 75
Core workforce
, 82
Corporatist policy-making
, 6
Corrosion
, 13
Cost-cutting strategies
, 190
Country-level Labour Force Surveys
, 61
Decentralisation
, 22
collective bargaining
, 35
company-level agreements
, 33
sectoral and company agreements
, 34
wage-setting mechanisms
, 35
Deliveroo
, 189
El Khomri reforms
, 43
Employment levels
, 50
Employment Precariousness Scale
, 70
Employment protection legislation (EPL)
, 4
Belgium
, 39
EU governance framework
, 39
open-ended contracts
, 37
public sectors
, 40
severance pay
, 38
Employment relationship
employment levels
, 50
Employment Precariousness Scale
, 70
individual choice approach
, 64–65
individual contracts approach
, 62–65
individual risk of precariousness
, 66
“lack of choice” element
, 72
quality of work approach
, 65–66
EU-10 countries
, 81
EU-15 countries
, 81
European Union
employment protection legislation
, 37–40
flexible employment
, 40–47
higher education mismatch
, 113
income
, 110
insecurity
, 111
involuntary part-time
, 97
involuntary temporary
, 99
labour market developments
, 32–37
long usual hours of work
, 105
night/shift work
, 101
PES involvement
, 109
precarious score (See Precarious score)
Saturday/Sunday work
, 103
unpaid overtime
, 106
working conditions dissatisfaction
, 114
European Union Labour Force Survey (EU LFS)
, 61, 74
European workforce
, 11
EUROSTAT
, 74
Exclusion
, 23
Expansion of higher education
, 50
External flexibility
, 7
Female labour market participation rates
, 50
Financialisation
, 13
Fixed-term employment contract
, 55
Flexibilisation of production
, 50
Flexible contracts
, 54, 57–59
Flexible employment
, 8
employers commitment
, 40
EU labour markets
, 40
Greece
, 43
health risks
, 42
internal devaluation policies
, 43
in-work poverty
, 42
Italy
, 42–43
labour market entry barriers
, 41
liberalisation
, 44
long-term effectiveness
, 44
low-pay
, 42
non-standard work
, 42
Portugal
, 43
proliferation
, 12
risk of poverty
, 42
segmentation
, 40
Spanish labour market reforms
, 43
Swedish reform
, 44
temporary contracts
, 41
temporary employment
, 44
temporary employment contracts
, 40
zero-hours contract
, 42–43
Fordist Standard Employment model
, 49
Frictions
, 59
Grouping of countries
, 80–82
Human Capital Theory
, 58
Income levels
, 191
Income precariousness
, 76
Individual choice approach
, 64–65
Individual contracts approach
, 62–63
Insecurity
growing levels
, 188
job
, 7, 108, 191
precariousness
, 76
insecurity
, 7
Institutional avoidance
, 5
Institutional context precariousness
, 75–76
Institutional framework
, 191
International Labour Organisation (ILOs)
, 11, 65
Involuntary non-standard employment (INE)
, 64, 73, 89, 93
Job context
, 191
working conditions precariousness
, 76–80
Job insecurity
, 7, 108, 191
Job security
, 4
Keynesian policies
, 6
Labour Force Survey
, 54, 64
Labour market developments
, 32–33
Labour market reforms
, 45
Labour market (de)regulation
, 50
Lay-offs
, 11
Legal-institutionalist framework
, 16
Liberalisation
, 44
Low-income jobs
, 52
Low-paid jobs
, 4
Low-skilled workers
, 7, 8
Low-wage sectors
, 14
Marginality
, 23
Mediterranean countries
, 81, 96
Minimum wage (MW)
, 17
Nearly conservative
, 81
Neighbouring countries
, 81
Neoclassical economics
, 6
Neoliberalism
, 19
neoliberal analysis
, 19
neoliberal politics
, 6
neoliberal thinking
, 19, 20
Non-permanent contract
, 57
Non-standard contracts
, 54
Non-standard employment
involuntary non-standard employment (INE)
, 73, 93
“job quality” characteristics
, 66
Non-standard jobs
, 62
Non-traditional employment
, 59
Non-willing temporary employment
, 60
Nordic countries
, 81
Optimal employment contracts
, 54
Opt-out clauses
, 35
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
, 66
Outsourcing
, 189
Part-time employment
, 15
Permanent (less risky) contracts
, 60
Permanent employment contract
, 43
Permanent temporaries
, 60
Policy-making
, 16
Precarious employment
age groups
, 86, 87
atypical contracts
, 63
Austria
, 124–125
Begium
, 126–127
Bulgaria
, 128–129
country group
, 93, 94–95
Croatia
, 150–151
Cyprus
, 132–133
Czech Republic
, 134–135
definition
, 53
Denmark
, 138–139
Estonia
, 140–141
Finland
, 144–145
France
, 146–147
gender
, 88
Germany
, 136–137
Greece
, 148–149
Hungary
, 152–153
Iceland
, 156–157
institutional setting
, 63
Ireland
, 154–155
Italy
, 158–159
job-based indicators
, 70
Latvia
, 160–161
level of education
, 90
Lithuania
, 162–163
long expected duration of unemployment
, 72
low pay
, 70
Luxembourg
, 164–165
Malta
, 166–167
nationality
, 91, 92
Netherlands
, 168–169
non-permanent contract
, 72
non-standard employment
, 66
Norway
, 170–171
outcomes
, 67–69
“plug-in and play,” 61
Poland
, 172–173
Portugal
, 174–175
Romania
, 176–177
Slovakia
, 182–183
Slovenia
, 180–181
snowball effect
, 69
Spain
, 142–143
Sweden
, 178–179
Switzerland
, 130–131
temporary contacts
, 70
three-category scale
, 71
UK
, 184–185
unsociable hours
, 75
very short or long working hours
, 70
Precariousness
, 53–60
contract
, 75
income
, 76
individual risk
, 66–67
insecurity
, 76
institutional context
, 75–76
intensification
, 59
job context/working conditions
, 76–80
unsociable hours
, 75
Precarious score
age
, 116
education
, 116
employment strictness
, 121
EU countries
, 117
GDP
, 123
gender
, 116
level of unemployment
, 120
nationality
, 116
size
, 119
Precarious work concept
, 51–53
Precarity
causes
, 4
definitions
, 22–26
employment protection
, 5
Fordist systems
, 5
Germany
, 5
institutionalist perspective
, 12–17
Marxist perspective
, 9–12
neoliberal perspective
, 17–22
new social class
, 26–27
nonstandard jobs
, 8
theoretical perspectives
, 9
trade union membership
, 5
wage–productivity deals
, 6
Probation periods
, 56
Proletarisation
, 27
Psychosocial Work Environment Survey
, 70
Public Employment Services (PES)
, 39, 75, 108
Public-sector reforms
, 7
Quality of work approach
, 65–66
RAND American Life Panel
, 62
Recession
, 188
Rising educational levels
, 50
“Risk society system of underemployment,” 51
Screening mechanism
, 56–57
Second World War
, 188
Self-employment
, 6
Severance pay
, 38
‘Shadow’ economy
, 61
Societal problems
, 20
Stable employment relationship
, 50
Standard employment relationship
, 49
“Stepping-stone” interpretation
, 55
Strain
, 68
Surplus value
, 9, 10
Survival strategy
, 7
Temporary employment
, 44
flexible contract
, 57–59
friction of the market
, 59–60
screening mechanism
, 56–57
signal
, 54–56
Traditional working-class occupations
, 11
Uber
, 189
Uncertainty
, 68
Unsociable hours precariousness
, 75
Vulnerability
, 71
Vulnerable workers
, 192
White-collar workers
, 27, 39
Working Conditions Survey
, 54
Zero-hours contracts
, 26, 61, 190