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Good, bad and very bad part-time jobs for women? Re-examining the importance of occupational class for job quality since the ‘great recession' in Britain

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Article

Warren, Tracey ; Lyonette, Clare

Work, Employment and Society

2018

32

4

August

747-767

gender ; quality of working life ; part time employment ; economic recession

United Kingdom

Human rights

https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017018762289

English

Bibliogr.;Statistics

"Britain has long stood out in Europe for its extensive but poor-quality part-time labour market dominated by women workers, who are concentrated in lower-level jobs demanding few skills and low levels of education, offering weak wage rates and restricted advancement opportunities. This article explores trends in part-time job quality for women up to and beyond the recession of 2008/9, and asks whether post-recessionary job quality remains differentiated by occupational class. A pre-recessionary narrowing of the part-time/full-time gap in job quality appears to have been maintained for the women in higher-level part-time jobs, while part- and full-timers in lower-level jobs suffered the worst effects of the recession, signalling deepening occupational class inequalities among working women. "

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