1st Edition

Education, Training and the Future of Work I Social, Political and Economic Contexts of Policy Development

Edited By John Ahier, Geoff Esland Copyright 1999
    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    A central claim of this volume is that public policy in education and training can only be properly understood if it is seen in relation to prevailing economic and employment conditions. It has become increaslingly apparent that the neo-liberal economic policies pursued by Western governments during the 1980s and 1990s have led to a growing world-wide 'work crisis'. Unemployment levels, particularly in Europe, remain persistently high, and for those in employment, job insecurity and long working hours have become the norm. The response of UK governments has been to promote 'flexibility' in employment practices while proclaiming the importance of improving skill levels through education and training.
    This volume challenges the adequacy of such an approach, and asks whether reliance on education and training reforms without additional political intervention in economic processes is capable of reversing current trends.
    Issues covered in this reader include:
    * the impact of globalization on employment trends
    * neo-liberal and neo-Keynesian approaches to employment policy
    * political reforms in education and training institutions
    * the impact of flexibilization on private life and the family.
    The two volumes in this series are readers for the Open University course Education, Training and the Future of Work, E837, a module of the MA in Education. The companion volume is Education, Training and the Future of Work II: Developments in Vocational Education and Training.
    John Ahier is Lecturer in Education at the Open University. Geoff Esland is Director of the Centre for Sociology and Social Research at the Open University and Course team Chair of E837.

    Introduction, Geoff Esland, John Ahier; Chapter 1 The changing nature of work; Chapter 2 Education, globalization and economic development, Phillip Brown, Hugh Lauder; Chapter 3 The great work dilemma, Martin Carnoy; Chapter 4 The new knowledge work, Stanley Aronowitz, William DiFazio; Chapter 5 Jobs and people, John Grieve Smith; Chapter 6 Evaluating the assumptions that underlie training policy, Ewart Keep, Ken Mayhew; Chapter 7 Expanding employment; Chapter 8 Managerializing organizational culture, Geoff Esland, Karen Esland, Mike Murphy, Karen Yarrow; Chapter 9 ::, Richard Winter; Chapter 10 Economic restructuring and unemployment, Faith Robertson Elliot; Chapter 11 Social change and labour market transitions, Andy Furlong, Fred Cartmel; Chapter 12 Big pictures and fine detail, John Ahier, Rob Moore;

    Biography

    John Ahier, Geoff Esland