The quality of employment and decent work: definitions, methodologies, and ongoing debates
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2014Metadata
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Burchell, Brendan
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The quality of employment and decent work: definitions, methodologies, and ongoing debates
Abstract
This article explores the development of concepts related to the ‘quality of employment’
in the academic literature in terms of their definition, methodological progress
and ongoing policy debates. Over time, these concepts have evolved from
simple studies of job satisfaction towards more comprehensive measures of job and
employment quality, including the International Labour Organization’s concept of
‘Decent Work’ launched in 1999. This article compares the parallel development
of quality of employment measures in the European Union with the ILO’s Decent
Work agenda and concludes that the former has advanced much further due to
more consistent efforts to generate internationally comparable data on labour markets,
which permit detailed measurements and international comparisons. In contrast,
Decent Work remains a very broadly defined concept, which is impossible to
measure across countries. We conclude by proposing three important differences
between these two scenarios that have lead to such diverging paths: the lack of availability
of internationally comparable data, the control over the research agenda by
partisan social actors, and a prematurely mandated definition of Decent Work that
is extremely vague and all-encompassing.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
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We also gratefully acknowledge funding from the Cambridge
Humanities Research Grants (2012) and from the European Union’s FP7 project ‘Nopoor’ that contributed
to this research.
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Cambridge Journal of Economics 2014, 38, 459–477
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