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Influence of work–welfare cycling and labour market segmentation on employment histories of young long-term unemployed

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Article

McTier, Alexander ; McGregor, Alan

Work, Employment and Society

2018

32

1

February

20-37

unemployment ; long term unemployed ; labour market segmentation ; youth unemployment

United Kingdom

Unemployment

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0950017017697857

English

Bibliogr.

"The onset of the ‘Great Recession' from 2008 was associated with a significant increase in long-term unemployment among young people. Work–welfare cycling has been put forward as a contributory factor. Drawing on a large-scale survey of long-term unemployed young people, this article argues that segmented labour market theory provides a strong explanatory framework for understanding the nature of long-term unemployment among young people, with the literature on work–welfare cycling contributing to an understanding of one of the processes by which precarious employment impacts on employability and labour supply. A second key finding is the heterogeneous nature of the young long-term unemployed, which in turn requires policy responses more customized to the needs of the different groups. "

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