Employability and the rise of the no-wage economy: resistance to unpaid work in the United Kingdom

Employability has become a new buzzword of the 21st century. It advocates that to keep oneself attractive - through lifelong learning and the continuous acquisition of skills - protects oneself from the vulnerabilities of the labour market. The purpose of this PhD project is twofold: First, I invest...

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Main Author: Weghmann, Vera
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50869/
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author Weghmann, Vera
author_facet Weghmann, Vera
author_sort Weghmann, Vera
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Employability has become a new buzzword of the 21st century. It advocates that to keep oneself attractive - through lifelong learning and the continuous acquisition of skills - protects oneself from the vulnerabilities of the labour market. The purpose of this PhD project is twofold: First, I investigate in what ways the employability agenda recreates neoliberal hegemony. Second, I analyse through what type of collective agency people contest the concept of employability. It is a comparative project of two main employability sectors, namely welfare to work programmes and higher education. In particular, I elaborate on the link between employability and the rise of unpaid labour in form of work-experiences. In line with neo-Gramscian theory and my critique of it this PhD research looks at the material structures, institutions and ideology which have shaped the political economy of employability through processes of class contestation. Participatory Action Research methodology is used to provide insights into the formations, dynamics, and outcomes of the main social forces resisting employability outside of established trade unions. This PhD, thereby, feeds into broader discussions on the decline and future of trade unionism and new ways of organising around work, which go beyond the workplace and might demand new workers institutions as well as a greater engagement with other actors in the community.
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spelling nottingham-508692025-02-28T14:03:57Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50869/ Employability and the rise of the no-wage economy: resistance to unpaid work in the United Kingdom Weghmann, Vera Employability has become a new buzzword of the 21st century. It advocates that to keep oneself attractive - through lifelong learning and the continuous acquisition of skills - protects oneself from the vulnerabilities of the labour market. The purpose of this PhD project is twofold: First, I investigate in what ways the employability agenda recreates neoliberal hegemony. Second, I analyse through what type of collective agency people contest the concept of employability. It is a comparative project of two main employability sectors, namely welfare to work programmes and higher education. In particular, I elaborate on the link between employability and the rise of unpaid labour in form of work-experiences. In line with neo-Gramscian theory and my critique of it this PhD research looks at the material structures, institutions and ideology which have shaped the political economy of employability through processes of class contestation. Participatory Action Research methodology is used to provide insights into the formations, dynamics, and outcomes of the main social forces resisting employability outside of established trade unions. This PhD, thereby, feeds into broader discussions on the decline and future of trade unionism and new ways of organising around work, which go beyond the workplace and might demand new workers institutions as well as a greater engagement with other actors in the community. 2018-07-17 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50869/1/Vera%20Weghmann%2C%20PhD%2C%202%20April%202018.pdf Weghmann, Vera (2018) Employability and the rise of the no-wage economy: resistance to unpaid work in the United Kingdom. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. employability no-wage economy labour movement unpaid labour labor economic conditions britain uk united kingdom
spellingShingle employability
no-wage economy
labour movement
unpaid labour
labor
economic conditions
britain
uk
united kingdom
Weghmann, Vera
Employability and the rise of the no-wage economy: resistance to unpaid work in the United Kingdom
title Employability and the rise of the no-wage economy: resistance to unpaid work in the United Kingdom
title_full Employability and the rise of the no-wage economy: resistance to unpaid work in the United Kingdom
title_fullStr Employability and the rise of the no-wage economy: resistance to unpaid work in the United Kingdom
title_full_unstemmed Employability and the rise of the no-wage economy: resistance to unpaid work in the United Kingdom
title_short Employability and the rise of the no-wage economy: resistance to unpaid work in the United Kingdom
title_sort employability and the rise of the no-wage economy: resistance to unpaid work in the united kingdom
topic employability
no-wage economy
labour movement
unpaid labour
labor
economic conditions
britain
uk
united kingdom
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50869/