Sources of diversity in internal labour markets

This paper sets out to examine the assumption made by radical economists that internal labour markets formed by large scale corporate employers provide a source of labour market dichotomization between `core' and `peripheral' employment. It criticizes the assumption that internal labour ma...

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Main Author: Loveridge, R
Format: Journal article
Published: Sage Publications Ltd. 1983
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author Loveridge, R
author_facet Loveridge, R
author_sort Loveridge, R
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description This paper sets out to examine the assumption made by radical economists that internal labour markets formed by large scale corporate employers provide a source of labour market dichotomization between `core' and `peripheral' employment. It criticizes the assumption that internal labour markets can be treated as a culturally neutral phenomenon emerging from the demands of technical rationality. Since, by definition, the boundaries of internal labour markets are institutionally defined, their forms and rationales display a cross-national diversity which indicates a difference in employer strategies and employee responses to the historical course of technological innovation. In particular it suggests that the struggle for task control over the mode of production represented in the creation of new occupations has, in the Anglo Saxon culture, been more likely to take place at the point of production, whereas in France it has been expressed in overtly class terms and in modern Germany in the bureaucratic control systems adopted by a corporate pluralistic state.
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spelling oxford-uuid:4132dd2c-c8f7-455e-9644-f7424498e1b52022-03-26T14:42:07ZSources of diversity in internal labour marketsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:4132dd2c-c8f7-455e-9644-f7424498e1b5Saïd Business School - EurekaSage Publications Ltd.1983Loveridge, RThis paper sets out to examine the assumption made by radical economists that internal labour markets formed by large scale corporate employers provide a source of labour market dichotomization between `core' and `peripheral' employment. It criticizes the assumption that internal labour markets can be treated as a culturally neutral phenomenon emerging from the demands of technical rationality. Since, by definition, the boundaries of internal labour markets are institutionally defined, their forms and rationales display a cross-national diversity which indicates a difference in employer strategies and employee responses to the historical course of technological innovation. In particular it suggests that the struggle for task control over the mode of production represented in the creation of new occupations has, in the Anglo Saxon culture, been more likely to take place at the point of production, whereas in France it has been expressed in overtly class terms and in modern Germany in the bureaucratic control systems adopted by a corporate pluralistic state.
spellingShingle Loveridge, R
Sources of diversity in internal labour markets
title Sources of diversity in internal labour markets
title_full Sources of diversity in internal labour markets
title_fullStr Sources of diversity in internal labour markets
title_full_unstemmed Sources of diversity in internal labour markets
title_short Sources of diversity in internal labour markets
title_sort sources of diversity in internal labour markets
work_keys_str_mv AT loveridger sourcesofdiversityininternallabourmarkets