394 results on '"Low skilled"'
Search Results
2. Development of web application towards creating a continuous supportive learning environment for 45+, low educated and low skilled adults.
- Author
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Riste, Timovski, Atanasova, Ana, Carvalho, Tome, Pachemska, Tatjana A., and Herranz Zentarski, Ana Isabel
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WEB-based user interfaces ,SEMISKILLED labor ,ADULT education ,LEARNING ,INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
Most of the educators (teachers) are broadly versatile when they are working with learners that are literate on high levels (well educated or prepared). But, when low literate and/or low educated learners are concerned, many difficulties arise. Pretty important group of people are those who are functionally illiterate. International project was conducted in the period 2020-2022 with its main goal to ensure the adult educators to possess the necessary skills and competencies for creating motivating, productive and effective learning environment for adults with educational levels that are below the needs of the modern society regarding its professional, cultural and social aspect. The main intellectual output (out of three) was the web application integrating all the aspects of the issues targeted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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3. Low Skilled adults’ memories about their Physical Education Teachers. [Los recuerdos de adultos con baja competencia motriz sobre sus Profesores de Educación Física].
- Author
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Luis Miguel Ruiz-Pérez, Miguel Angel Gómez, Miriam Palomo-Nieto, and José Antonio Navia-Manzano
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autobiographical memories ,low skilled ,adults ,school physical education ,teachers ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Recreation. Leisure ,GV1-1860 ,Sports ,GV557-1198.995 - Abstract
The main purpose of this study was to analyze retrospectively the memories of a group of adults with low skills and the relationships between their memories and their physical education teachers during their school time. Ten adults (7 women and three men) participated in this study, aged between 25 and 56 years that declared to be low skilled during their school days. In order to carry out this study, a semi-strutured interview was conducted focusing the attention on obtaining memories of participants in their PE classes during their schoolage, and mainly their perceptions and feelings about their Primary and Secondary PE teachers. Results showed that the memories of behaviors and personality of their PE teachers were more important for participants than the learning from activities that their PE teachers taught. The feelings and emotions about his/her PE teachers were mostly negative, characterized by humiliation, abandonment, lack of help or indifference towards them. For these participants, their PE teachers did not live up to their needs. Knowing these memories had permitted the researchers to know a hidden part of the PE subject that is referred to a sector of the school population that shows low motor competence.
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- 2020
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4. Teacher cognition and instruction: Effective teachers' critical choices for low skilled students and physical activities.
- Author
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Lysniak, U. and Bernstein, E. R.
- Abstract
This review examines foundational and recent literature focusing on teacher cognition and how it influences instruction during physical education. Databases in physical education and education were used to gain an understanding of how teacher cognition has been studied in physical education. The topic of teacher cognition is key for student experience, especially for low skilled students, who are trying to develop skill. The way teachers think about activities and present the tasks during physical education class are critically important as students explore movement possibilities. This review will cover the following sections: a) methodological considerations when studying teacher cognition, b) planning, c) reflection, and d) pedagogical content knowledge. Being aware of elements that add to instruction during teachers' thoughtful practices, may increase student learning opportunities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
5. Low Skilled adults' memories about their Physical Education Teachers.
- Author
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Ruiz-Pérez, Luis M., Gómez, Miguel A., Palomo-Nieto, Miriam, and Navia-Manzano, José A.
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PHYSICAL education teachers ,MEMORY ,TEACHER-student relationships ,MOTOR ability ,ADULTS - Abstract
Copyright of RICYDE. Revista Internacional de Ciencias del Deporte is the property of Revista Internacional de Ciencias del Deporte and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
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6. Investing in skills to overcome the crisis? Low-skilled workers in Italy: European strategies, policies and structural weaknesses.
- Author
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Zanazzi, Silvia
- Subjects
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SEMISKILLED labor , *UNSKILLED labor , *LABOR market , *CONTINUING education , *FINANCIAL crises - Abstract
A skilled workforce is a prerequisite for productivity and a stepping stone for innovation. This is the reason why education and investment in skills have been made the foundations of Europe 2020, Europe’s strategy to overcome the economic crisis and boost growth. The propensity for developing skills is consistently present in European countries and concerns all educational levels. However, differences between countries are often considerable, in particular with regard to skills and educational attainment. There are countries, such as Italy, which have not been successful thus far at decreasing the number of low-skilled workers. This article aims to describe the situation of low-educated and low-skilled workers in Italy and the impact of the economic crisis on this particularly vulnerable group. The work is based on official data issued by national and international institutions, as well as on results from a narrative analysis of 15 biographical interviews with low-skilled adults in Italy conducted within a Cedefop project. Drawing on both types of sources, the article will offer a perspective on the relationship between structural constraints in regard to access to and participation in lifelong learning in Italy, specifically for low-skilled workers, and individual strategies adopted to cope with these constraints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. Drivers of learning for the low skilled.
- Author
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Brown, Alan and Bimrose, Jenny
- Subjects
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SEMISKILLED labor , *UNSKILLED labor , *LABOR market , *SELF-efficacy , *CAREER development - Abstract
The drivers of learning for mid-career workers with few initial qualifications from the Czech Republic, Denmark, England, France, Germany, Italy and Poland are examined. The focus in this article is upon the learning pathways and experience of the low-qualified drawn from empirical research which gathered and analysed the strategic career and learning biographies of 105 low-skilled individuals, mainly aged between 25 and 40, in the 7 countries, using semi-structured narrative interviews. The five drivers for learning evident in the interviews were enhancing self-efficacy; self-improvement; labour market-orientated learning; significant others motivating learning; and work-related practical learning. The interviewees were divided between those who wanted tangible and immediate learning outcomes and those who saw learning primarily as a means of self-improvement. Some interviewees with negative experiences of initial education were motivated to re-engage by a positive experience with continuing education, encouragement of significant others or through an experience of mastery of challenges at work which led to an increase in their self-efficacy. For the majority of interviewees, practical learning was particularly appreciated, whether undertaken to secure or enhance their current labour market position or undertaken to increase their self-efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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8. Participatory perspectives for the low skilled and the low educated: how can media literacy influence the social and economic participation of the low skilled and the low educated?
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Saskia Brand-Gruwel, Paulo Moekotte, and Henk Ritzen
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Media literacy ,low skilled ,low educated ,social participation ,economic participation ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 - Abstract
We assume that social media use contributes to employability and sociality and media literacy complements a basic set of skills. Especially the low skilled and low educated lack media literacy, which contributes to their precarious situation and increases a participation gap. A database search for peer reviewed articles covering effective elements of media literacy did not return any useful results. The retrieved literature was scarce and media literacy concepts were inconclusive, conflated or ambivalent. We then broadened our scope, using a snow ball technique and Harzing’s Publish and Perish for control purposes. This approach lead to literature indicating that self-presentation and self-profiling are important literacy practices, involving knowledge and skills related to participation in social and economic contexts and understanding of the relations between sociality, employability and networks. Media literacy is best approached as hands-on, situated and experiential, taught in a democratic and critical fashion and related to the attitudes and perspective of the low educated and the low skilled. There is however no clear answer what the complementary role of informal learning is and how literacy related skills and knowledge demanded for lifelong learning may change during the life course. It is also important that policies focussing on inclusion and participation broaden their perspective beyond individualistic notions and , consider the influence of structuralizing mechanisms that create inequality and extend their explanations beyond those framed by economic theories, models and categories.
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- 2017
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9. Immigration Enforcement and the Hiring of Low-Skilled Labor
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Esther Arenas-Arroyo, Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes, and Bernhard Schmidpeter
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Labour economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Immigration ,Labor demand ,General Medicine ,Human capital ,Work hours ,Identification (information) ,Immigration policy ,0502 economics and business ,Business ,050207 economics ,Enforcement ,Low skilled ,050205 econometrics ,media_common - Abstract
We examine how firms adjust their labor demand to immigration policy changes resulting from intensified interior immigration enforcement. Using the temporal and geographic variation in the adoption of such policies as a source of identification, we find that firms boost their demand for low-skilled foreign-born labor under the H-2B visa program as enforcement intensifies. Furthermore, firms' increased demand for guest workers is inversely related to natives' employment in occupations where most H-2B workers are hired; however, it does not seem to alter natives' wages or work hours, nor does it seem to redistribute native labor away from those occupations.
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- 2021
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10. Low-Skilled Return Migrants as Adult Learners: A Case of Mongolian Migrants Returning From South Korea
- Author
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Battuya Lkhagvadulam, Wonsup Chang, and Kyoungjin Jang
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Exploratory research ,Demographic economics ,Sociology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Low skilled ,Education - Abstract
This is an exploratory study on returning migrants as adult learners preparing to return to their home countries. We examined the educational needs and learning experiences of nine Mongolian migrants returning from South Korea who participated in vocational education programs for imminent returnees. Our qualitative analysis found that returning migrants have (a) the need to bring viable skills back to their home countries, (b) the need to learn how to start a business, and (c) the need to prove their experience and skills acquired in South Korea. Participants’ vocational education experiences revealed that current educational practices (a) provide knowledge that is too basic and abstract to meet migrants’ needs, and (b) lack variety to meet individuals’ needs to develop their skills; however, (c) they did enable migrants to share information and ideas about their upcoming return to Mongolia. Based on the findings, we identified key issues that must be considered to support migrants’ sustainable return to their home countries. The study’s limitations and suggestions for future research are provided to support various types of return migrants and their needs.
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- 2021
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11. High-Skilled vs. Low-Skilled Migrant Women: the Use of Competencies and Knowledge—Theoretical and Political Implications: an Example of the Elderly Care Sector in Poland
- Author
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Jolanta Maj and Sabina Kubiciel-Lodzińska
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Cultural Studies ,Higher education ,Scope (project management) ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Immigration ,0507 social and economic geography ,Elderly care ,0506 political science ,Politics ,Work (electrical) ,Anthropology ,Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,Remuneration ,Demographic economics ,business ,050703 geography ,Low skilled ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
This paper presents the influx of migrants into the elderly care sector in Poland, which, until recently, has been perceived as a country that “exports” caregivers. It describes the results of 31 individual in-depth interviews conducted with immigrant women who take care of elderly in Poland. The purpose of the study was to determine the profile of an immigrant taking up work in the elderly care sector, including the specification of their education level and competencies. It was determined that 55% of the respondents have higher education, including over 20% with a degree in nursing or physiotherapeutic education. It was established that, when analysing migrants in the care sector, it seems necessary not to divide migrants based on their education level (high- vs. low-skilled), but rather to consider the education profile as a whole (general and special profile education). Women with specialised education differ from the other migrants in regard to their better labour market position (higher remuneration, legal employment) and the scope of skill usage. The comparison of high-skilled and low-skilled workers in the care sector is very useful from the perspective of policymakers due to the fact that there is an issue of over-qualification in Poland. The article contributes to the literature, especially research dealing with brain waste, as there is theoretical and empirical gap in research on the differences between high-skilled and low-skilled migrants working in elderly care.
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- 2021
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12. Minimum Wage Policy: Is There Any Impact on Low Skilled Workers in Electrical and Electronics Companies in Malaysia?
- Author
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null Vally Senasi, null Samihah Khalil @ Halim, and null Balakrishnan Parasuraman
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,Strategy and Management ,Electronics ,Business ,Business and International Management ,Minimum wage ,Finance ,Low skilled - Abstract
Wage are the greatest pushing factor for many workers to work and positively relates to employee life satisfaction. Meanwhile, fringe benefits improve the skills and knowledge of workers and enhance the organization’s reputation. Minimum wage policies around the world uphold the principle to provide a basic living wage for their workers. Nevertheless, the impact of national minimum wage policy on Malaysian employees, in particular, was the least explored since enacted into law in 2012. This study examines the minimum- wage impact on low-level skilled workers in the electrical and electronics industry in Malaysia. Minimum wage can have an effect on labor productivity and fringe benefits, particularly training, allowances, and insurance, have become important research topics. As such, this research discusses the effect of minimum wages on labor productivity and fringe benefits of employees. A semi-structured survey questionnaire was distributed to 600 employees in electrical and electronics firms in Penang and Kulim Industrial Zones. Data from 432 questionnaires were quantitatively analyzed using Exploratory Data Analysis (EDA). The findings suggest that employers should make some adjustments in administering the wage scale due to the implementation of minimum wage national policy that has impacted firms’ costs and incomes. The results also found that the minimum wage affects labor productivity and wage differences among workers. Meanwhile, the minimum wage does not adversely affect the adjustments to the fringe benefits, except for the provision of training. This study recommends more strategic plans and negotiations between stakeholders on wage and fringe benefits that would warrant continuous positive effects for both workers and employers.
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- 2021
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13. Mapping themes for the well-being of low-skilled gig workers: Implications for digital platform design
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Rachelle Bosua, Vanessa Dirksen, and Emsie Arnoldi
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Cultural Studies ,Knowledge management ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,050209 industrial relations ,Gender Studies ,0502 economics and business ,Well-being ,Sociology ,business ,050203 business & management ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Low skilled ,Demography - Abstract
Platform-based work and corresponding business models are redefining the work landscape. The rapid growth in digital platforms has prospered since the start of the pandemic, enabling various service-based gig work tasks such as Amazon, Uber and Deliveroo. Currently, there is scant literature that examines the well-being of gig workers in the platform economy. In this article, we reflect on the well-being of one category of gig workers, low-skilled service-based gig workers. These workers are often migrants or transient workers who face barriers to enter the job market in a foreign country, need a job to generate an income for the family, often transition between jobs or wish to conduct flexible, temporary gigs afforded by many digital platforms. Informed by an overview of the literature and the International Labour Organization’s (ILO) definition of well-being, our study supports the notion that precarity leads to compromised worker well-being. As a consequence, we identify four themes for gig worker well-being that can be incorporated in the design of platforms to improve the well-being of low-skilled service-based workers: (1) regulatory aspects and contracts to protect the worker, (2) job-related appraisal and reward systems, (3) feeling connected in a work-related social network and (4) algorithmic control and organization of tasks and work. Our study opens discourse on digital platform worker well-being, suggesting improvements to digital platform design to support worker well-being for service-based gig workers and potentially all forms of gig work.
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- 2021
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14. Employment inequality: Why do the low-skilled work less now?
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Erin Wolcott
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Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Differential (mechanical device) ,Work (electrical) ,Search model ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,050207 economics ,Welfare ,Recreation ,Finance ,Low skilled ,050205 econometrics ,media_common ,Computer technology - Abstract
Low-skilled prime-age men are less likely to be employed than high-skilled prime-age men, and the differential has increased since the 1970s. I build a search model encompassing three explanations: (1) automation and trade reduced the demand for low-skilled workers; (2) health, welfare, and recreational gaming/computer technology reduced the supply of low-skilled workers; and (3) factors affecting job search, such as online job boards, reduced frictions for high-skilled workers. I find a shift in demand away from low-skilled workers was the leading cause, a shift in supply had little effect, and search frictions actually reduced employment inequality.
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- 2021
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15. Regional labour market effects of immigration on low-skilled workers: the case of Sweden 1990–2003
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Lars Fredrik Andersson, Sandro Scocco, Evans Korang Adjei, and Rikard Eriksson
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Economics and Econometrics ,Supply shock ,Economics ,Refugee ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Wage ,Distribution (economics) ,Economic Geography ,0502 economics and business ,Nationalekonomi ,050207 economics ,Real wages ,Low skilled ,050205 econometrics ,media_common ,Economic History ,Market competition ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Ekonomisk geografi ,Ekonomisk historia ,Demographic economics ,business - Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of immigration on the labour market outcomes of low-educated natives (i.e. residents without a university diploma). Using the labour market competition theory, which argues that the labour market effects of natives depend on the skill set of immigrants, the paper addresses whether immigrants are complementary to or substitutes for native workers.Design/methodology/approachLongitudinal matched employer–employee data on Sweden are used to estimate how low-educated natives, in regions experiencing the greatest influx of refugees from the Balkan wars, responded to this supply shock with regard to real wages, employment and job mobility between 1990 and 2003.FindingsFirst, the analysis shows that low-educated native workers respond to the arrival of immigrants with an increase in real wages. Second, although employment prospects in general worsened for low-skilled workers in most regions, this is not attributable to the regions experiencing the largest supply shock. Third, there are indications that low-skilled natives in immigration-rich regions are more likely to change workplace, particularly in combination with moving upwards in the wage distribution.Originality/valueRather than seeing an emergence of the commonly perceived displacement mechanism when an economy is subject to a supply shock, the regional findings suggest that high inflows of immigrants tend to induce a mechanism that pulls native workers upwards in the wage distribution. This is important, as the proportion of immigrants is seldom evenly distributed within a nation.
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- 2021
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16. Learning outcomes of elementary School Children Low Skilled in horizontal bar exercises after implementation of an annual unit program for three years
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Michiko Harigai and Tomoyasu Kondoh
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Mathematics education ,Horizontal bar ,Psychology ,Low skilled ,Unit (housing) - Published
- 2021
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17. A Study on the Family Reunification Rights of Low-skilled Foreign Workers in South Korea Based on International Regulations
- Author
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Wonjoo Choi
- Subjects
Political science ,Demographic economics ,General Medicine ,Family reunification ,Low skilled - Published
- 2020
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18. The welfare impact of migration with endogenous cross-border movement: An application to the European Union
- Author
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Miguel Cardoso
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Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,General equilibrium theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Immigration ,Brexit ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Demographic economics ,050207 economics ,European union ,Welfare ,Low skilled ,media_common - Abstract
In this paper, I examine the welfare impact of migration in a general equilibrium model with endogenous worker location choice. My framework incorporates labor productivity differences across countries, worker heterogeneity in productivity across skill and nativity types, as well as country-pair specific costs of migration. In a series of experiments, I predict the migration response of workers to an expansion or contraction in the number of European Union (EU) member countries. For the case of the United Kingdom (U.K.) leaving the EU, commonly referred to as Brexit, low skilled native-born U.K. workers suffer a drop-in income, whereas high skilled workers experience an increase. This result is driven, in part, by an increase in high skilled immigration to the U.K. from outside the EU, which helps to dampen the loss in income of low skilled workers.
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- 2020
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19. How COVID-19 may alleviate the multiple marginalization of racialized migrant workers
- Author
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Maike Isaac and Jennifer Elrick
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Sociology and Political Science ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Migrant workers ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,0506 political science ,Anthropology ,Political science ,Pandemic ,050602 political science & public administration ,Care work ,Demographic economics ,050703 geography ,Citizenship ,Low skilled ,media_common - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has heightened the visibility of “low skilled” migrant workers in the agricultural and care work sectors, who have been rebranded as “essential” by receiving states in the Glo...
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- 2020
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20. Tactical Behaviour of Youth Soccer Players: Differences Depending on Task Constraint Modification, Age and Skill Level
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Daniel Barreira, João Cláudio Machado, Jaime Serra-Olivares, Israel Teoldo, Alcides José Scaglia, and Alberto Góes
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performance level ,Section III – Sports Training ,Applied psychology ,Offensive ,Skill level ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,030229 sport sciences ,pedagogical principles ,Lag sequential analysis ,Task (project management) ,Constraint (information theory) ,Exploratory behaviour ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Teaching games for understanding ,Physiology (medical) ,nonlinear pedagogy ,lcsh:Sports medicine ,lcsh:RC1200-1245 ,complexity ,tactical skills ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Low skilled - Abstract
This study aimed to investigate: i) how Small-Sided and Conditioned Games based on different representation and exaggeration modification strategies, from the Teaching Games for Understanding pedagogical principles, affected team performance and exploratory behaviour; and ii) how teams and players of different ages and skill levels were affected by the use of these different modification strategies. In total, forty-eight youth male soccer players participated in the study (U15, n = 24 mean age = 13.06 ± 1.53 years; U17, n = 24 mean age = 16.89 ± 0.11 years). In both categories, players were organized into three groups according to their tactical efficiency level (Group 01 = High Skilled Players (HSP), Group 02 = Intermediate Skilled Players (ISP), and Group 03 = Low Skilled Players (LSP)). The HSP and LSP groups performed two types of Gk+4vs4+Gk Small-Sided and Conditioned Games (SSCGs) based on different representation and exaggeration modification strategies. The first type of SSCGs was modified by structural constraints (Structural SSCG) and the second type was modified by rule manipulation (Manipulation SSCG). Team performance and exploratory behaviour were analysed through the Offensive Sequences Characterization System and Lag Sequential Analysis, respectively. SSCG modification strategies affected differently tactical performance and exploratory behaviour of teams composed of players of different skill levels. It was found that SSCG modification strategy through rule manipulation provided players and teams with a higher level of difficulty, compromising their performance and inhibiting exploratory behaviour. This information is crucial to practitioners wishing to apply more appropriate pedagogical strategies to improve a specific tactical problem using a player-centred and game-based approach.
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- 2020
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21. An intersection of East Asian welfare and immigration regimes: The social rights of low‐skilled labour migrants in Japan and Korea
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Kyung Hwan Kim
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Productivism ,Sociology and Political Science ,Intersection ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political economy ,Immigration ,Social rights ,East Asia ,Ethnic nationalism ,Welfare ,Low skilled ,media_common - Published
- 2020
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22. Low-skilled emigration, remittances and economic development in India
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Jajati Keshari Parida, Ravi K. Raman, and A. P. Noushad
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Political science ,Development economics ,Low skilled ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Emigration - Abstract
This study explores the recent trends, state-wise changing patterns and determinants of low-skilled emigration from India to Gulf Cooperation Council using both familiar and unexplored sources of d...
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- 2020
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23. Low-Skilled Immigrants and Urban Development in China: A Labor Market Perspective
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Susu Wang and Chao Liang
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Economics and Econometrics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,05 social sciences ,Perspective (graphical) ,Instrumental variable ,Immigration ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Urban planning ,0502 economics and business ,Political Science and International Relations ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,Endogeneity ,050207 economics ,China ,Finance ,Low skilled ,050205 econometrics ,media_common - Abstract
This study investigates the impact of low-skilled immigrants on urban labor markets in China. Using historical migration networks as an instrumental variable to overcome endogeneity problems, we find that low-skilled immigrants significantly increase local wages. Census data reveal significant occupational segregation between low-skilled immigrants and local inhabitants. Low-skilled immigrants are found to substitute for low-skilled local inhabitants but are complementary for high-skilled local inhabitants. In addition, low-skilled immigrants boost women's labor participation and wages through consumption service markets. This study's findings reveal that discrimination against low-skilled immigrants weakens the reciprocal effects among immigrants and local inhabitants and hinders urban development.
- Published
- 2020
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24. Did Fund Managers Deliver Value During the Financial Crisis?
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John A. Doukas and Feng Dong
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Finance ,010407 polymers ,050208 finance ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Sample (statistics) ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Investment management ,Capital (economics) ,0502 economics and business ,Financial crisis ,Value (economics) ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Performance measurement ,Business ,Low skilled ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
This study provides evidence that individual investors are better off by investing through mutual funds run by skilled fund managers, who not only deliver higher risk-adjusted returns in normal times, but also attain similar performance even during turbulent economic states, such as the 2007–2009 global financial crisis. Specifically, we show that, on average, fund managers with the highest skill (top 20%) added $6.877 million of value annually during the early crisis period and $4.065 million of value during the late crisis period, compared with $3.198 million gain realized during the entire sample period. Low-skill fund managers (bottom 20%), however, lost $0.844 million of value during the early crisis period and $5.323 million of value during the late crisis period. TOPICS:Performance measurement, manager selection, wealth management Key Findings • Active managed mutual funds with skilled managers can serve an important insurance and value generating function not only during normal times, but also in extreme economic downturns. • Funds run by skilled managers experienced significant capital inflows during both the early and late stages of the financial crisis, while their low skilled counterparts incurred significant capital outflows. • Fund management skill persists at least one year during the whole financial crisis period.
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- 2020
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25. Assessing Visa Pathways for Australia’s Temporary Migrant Workforce
- Author
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Joanna Howe
- Subjects
Labour economics ,travail ,labour law ,work ,Workforce ,droit du travail ,temporary labour migration ,Business ,Low skilled ,migration de travail temporaire ,exploitation - Abstract
This article considers the regulation of entry pathways for temporary migrants into the Australian labour market. Australia’s temporary labour migration program accounts for one tenth of the labour market and has increased substantially in the last three decades. Although there is a discrete dedicated labour migration program for temporary skilled workers, there is also a substantial contribution made by unskilled and low skilled temporary migrants through the international student and working holiday maker programs. Cet article étudie la réglementation des voies d’entrée pour les migrants temporaires sur le marché du travail australien. Le programme australien de migration de main-d’œuvre temporaire représente un dixième du marché du travail et a considérablement augmenté au cours des trois dernières décennies. Bien qu’il existe un programme spécifique de migration de main-d’œuvre dédié aux travailleurs temporaires qualifiés, les migrants temporaires non qualifiés et peu qualifiés apportent également une contribution substantielle aux programmes d’étudiants internationaux et de vacanciers qui travaillent.
- Published
- 2021
26. Stories of learning and their significance to future pathways and aspirations.
- Author
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Barnes, Sally-Anne and Brown, Alan
- Subjects
- *
UNSKILLED labor , *CAREER development , *AMBITION , *EDUCATIONAL relevance , *VOCATIONAL education , *CONTINUING education - Abstract
This explores the narratives from three individuals in low-skilled employment in the UK. The interviewees reflected upon their experiences of learning from compulsory education and beyond and their pathways through education to employment. The narratives illustrate how with the support of significant others, resilience and proactivity, they can overcome negative influences and subjective barriers to learning. Their barriers to learning will be examined in terms of their impact on future pathways and aspirations. The discussion will conclude by examining the role of significant others, and the potential role of career professionals, in combatting negative experiences of learning in order to raise aspirations and support positive pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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27. Legal Pathways for Low-Skilled Migrant Workers
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Andrea Riester and Kathleen Newland
- Subjects
Migrant workers ,Demographic economics ,Business ,Low skilled - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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28. The Relation between Reading Performance and Eye Movement Parameters of High-Skilled and Low-Skilled Readers
- Author
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Selda Özdemir and Esmehan Özer
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Relation (database) ,Reading (process) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Eye movement ,Psychology ,Low skilled ,Education ,Cognitive psychology ,media_common - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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29. Weak Labor Force Attachment and Low-Skilled Natives
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Thomas R. Bailey
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Labour economics ,Economics ,Low skilled - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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30. Assessing the Uptake of Supervised Delivery in the Akuapem South District in the Eastern Region of Ghana
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Appiagyei Buabeng and Stephen Manortey
- Subjects
Health services ,Geography ,Health facility ,Attendance ,Skilled attendance ,Socioeconomics ,Healthcare providers ,Low skilled - Abstract
Introduction: In spite of the national target of achieving at least an 80% skilled delivery, skilled health providers attended to just 56.2% of deliveries in 2016 according to the Ghana Health Service annual report. The highest proportion of ANC registrants in the Akuapem South District in the Eastern Region of Ghana who sought skilled attendance at birth for the past 3 years has been about 36% as recorded in 2017. The fundamental factors responsible for this low skilled delivery in the district are poorly understood. The aim of this study, however, was to explore the factors that contribute to the uptake of skilled delivery in the Akuapem South District. Methodology: This cross-sectional study involved 371 women in the reproductive ages (15 - 49 years) who had delivered within the last 12 months preceding January 2019, and have been residents in the research communities during the period of pregnancy. A convenient sampling technique was used to select all 371 respondents from 15 communities. Structured questionnaires were used for the interviews by trained staff. Results: The prevalence of skilled delivery among respondents in this district as revealed by this study was 65.77% despite the 97.04% reported ANC attendance for at least once. Significant influencers of the uptake of skilled delivery were; maternal age, mother and partner’s educational level, partner’s occupation, the attitude of health staff/midwives, distance to the nearest health facility, transportation fare, and availability of medical equipment in the nearest health facility. Conclusion: Even though the overall ANC attendance was high, including women who made more than three visits, uptake of supervised delivery is a major challenge. There is, therefore, the need for the Akuapem South District Health Directorate to fully strengthen the adopted WHO’s goal that focuses on ANC at the individual facility levels.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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31. Relative Poverty in Great Britain and the United States, 1979-2017
- Author
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James P. Ziliak and Robert Joyce
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Economics and Econometrics ,Poverty ,Safety net ,05 social sciences ,Household survey ,Paid work ,Accounting ,0502 economics and business ,Development economics ,Economics ,050207 economics ,Finance ,Low skilled ,050205 econometrics - Abstract
This paper examines the major changes to the face of poverty in Great Britain over the past few decades, assessing the role of policy, and compares and contrasts this with the patterns seen in the United States, using harmonised household survey data. There are various commonalities between the countries, including a shift in the composition of those in poverty towards working‐age households without children, who have not been the focus of policy attention. There are also big differences, with a steadily increasing share of poverty in Great Britain – but a stable share in the United States – found in households with an adult in paid work. This perhaps explains why the anti‐poverty focus in Great Britain is now squarely on the plight of working households, while in the United States it is focused on labour force participation among the low skilled – even though, as we show, the United States has, for decades, been accustomed to in‐work poverty comprising a significantly higher proportion of overall poverty than in Great Britain.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Regional Discontinuities and the Effectiveness of Further Training Subsidies for Low-Skilled Employees
- Author
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Christine Dauth
- Subjects
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Labour economics ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Strategy and Management ,Instrumental variable ,Economics ,Subsidy ,Training (civil) ,Low skilled - Abstract
The author analyzes the effects of further training subsidies for low-skilled employees on individual labor market outcomes in Germany. Using detailed administrative data, the author exploits cross-regional variation in the policy styles of local employment agencies to identify causal effects of program participation. Findings show that training subsidies significantly increase cumulative employment duration and earnings in the short run and middle run for compliers, that is, those workers who additionally participate due to a more generous policy style in their agency. These gains are particularly pronounced for certain subgroups, such as women. A rough cost-benefit analysis, however, suggests that the program overall is not beneficial for the public budget.
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
33. Providing consular services to low-skilled migrant workers: partnerships that care
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Maaike Okano-Heijmans and Caspar Price
- Subjects
Economic growth ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Migrant workers ,05 social sciences ,050601 international relations ,0506 political science ,Globalization ,Work (electrical) ,Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,Societal development ,Low skilled ,Diplomacy ,media_common ,Consular assistance - Abstract
The growing number and proportion of migrant workers globally is an evolving issue in consular work. The globalisation of labour and markets, as well as rapid technological and societal development...
- Published
- 2019
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34. Organizational Citizenship Behaviors of Low-Skilled Immigrant Workers under Employment Permit System: Integrating Cultural Adjustment and Social Support Perspectives
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Eun Mi Chang and Jeong Won Lee
- Subjects
Cultural adjustment ,Organizational citizenship behavior ,Social support ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,General Materials Science ,Sociology ,Social psychology ,Low skilled ,media_common - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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35. Analisis Kemapuan Penyelesaian Soal Matematika Berorientasi Pisa dalam Konten Perubahan dan Hubungan pada Siswa SMP
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Sutama Sutama, Meggy Novitasari, and sofia sofia
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Research use ,Data collection ,Documentation ,Quantitative research ,Mathematics education ,Psychology ,Low skilled ,Test (assessment) - Abstract
This research aims to describes the process of problem solving question of PISA in students. This research use a qualitative of research methods. The subject of this research grade VIII A SMP Negeri 1 Teras amounted to 28 students. Data collection techniques are used tests, interviews, and documentation method. In this research the validity of data using triangulation techniques to compare test results data, interviews, and documentation. Quantitative data analysis techniques using whereas reduction, serving until the conclusion of the withdrawal measures adapted to the Polya. The results of this research were obtained conclusions high-capable Students can meet all the indicators in the settlement of the question of maximum, medium and low skilled students not consistent in performing the stages of completion of a matter so that insufficient.
- Published
- 2019
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36. Training and maintaining autonomy-supportive supervisory style in low-skilled occupations
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Maree Roche, Amy Yong, and Anna Sutton
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Medical education ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Training (civil) ,Style (sociolinguistics) ,0502 economics and business ,Business and International Management ,Psychology ,0503 education ,050203 business & management ,Autonomy ,Low skilled ,media_common - Abstract
According to self-determination theory, employees' well-being is related to the autonomy-supportive style of a supervisor. However, the effect of supervision style on well-being remains understudied in low-skilled occupations. This study employed a mixed-method, multi-level approach to examine the impact of autonomy-supportive training (AST) on supervisors and employees and to identify factors contributing to the maintenance of supervisors' autonomy support (SAS). The quantitative phase evaluated the effect of AST on supervisory style and employees' well-being, with a sample of 44 supervisors and 240 employees in New Zealand. The qualitative phase used focus groups and interview with 15 supervisors to explore factors that could influence the maintenance of SAS. Overall, supervisors can be trained to adopt an autonomy-supportive style, but these skills can also be diluted by organisational factors such as pressures and managerial behaviour. This study contributes to autonomy-supportive style research in order to account for factors affecting the maintenance of SAS in low-skilled occupations.
- Published
- 2019
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37. Reading, Writing, and Self‐Efficacy of Low‐Skilled Postsecondary Students
- Author
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Dolores Perin
- Subjects
Self-efficacy ,Medical education ,Writing skills ,Postsecondary education ,Reading (process) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Remedial education ,Psychology ,Reading skills ,Low skilled ,media_common - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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38. Writing Strategy Instruction for Low‐Skilled Postsecondary Students
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Charles A. MacArthur and Zoi A. Philippakos
- Subjects
Medical education ,Postsecondary education ,Learning disability ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Low skilled - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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39. Participation in Literacy Programs for Adults with Low Skills in Southeastern Europe
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George K. Zarifis
- Subjects
Medical education ,Adult literacy ,Political science ,Literacy Programs ,Low skilled - Published
- 2019
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40. Factors Influencing the Health and Safety of Temporary Foreign Workers in Skilled and Low-Skilled Occupations in Canada
- Author
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Leonor Cedillo, Katherine Lippel, and Delphine Nakache
- Subjects
Canada ,Safety Management ,Meat packing industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Vulnerability ,MEDLINE ,Occupational safety and health ,03 medical and health sciences ,Social support ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hospitality ,0502 economics and business ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,030212 general & internal medicine ,050207 economics ,Workplace ,Occupational Health ,050107 human factors ,Low skilled ,media_common ,Transients and Migrants ,Thesaurus (information retrieval) ,050208 finance ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Social Support ,Workload ,General Medicine ,Public relations ,Job security ,8. Economic growth ,Demographic economics ,Business ,Family reunification - Abstract
This article reports on a study of occupational health and safety (OHS) challenges for temporary foreign workers (TFWs) in low- and high-skilled occupations, based on twenty-two cases drawn from a broader study in three Canadian provinces. Interviewees in construction, meat processing, hospitality, and fast food reported concerns regarding working conditions and OHS issues. They include precarious migration status affecting voice; contrasting access to social support; and mechanisms undermining regulatory effectiveness. Sources of vulnerability include closed work permits (making workers dependent on a single employer for job security and family reunification); ineffective means to ensure contractual compliance; and TFW invisibility attributable to their dispersal throughout the labor market. Violations include increased workload without an increase in pay and non-compliance with OHS and contractual rules without oversight. Positive and negative practices are discussed. Recommendations include improving migration security to preserve worker voice and facilitating communication between immigration and OHS authorities.
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- 2019
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41. The Impact of Social Segregation on the Labor Market Outcomes of Low‐Skilled Workers*
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Gergely Horvath
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Social segregation ,Referral ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Economics ,Unemployment rate ,Demographic economics ,Welfare ,Productivity ,Low skilled ,Homophily ,media_common - Abstract
We study the impact of network homophily on labor market outcomes in a search‐and‐matching model with two job search channels: the formal market and social contacts. There are two worker types: low‐skilled and high‐skilled workers. The homophily level determines whether the referral networks of the two types are mixed or segregated from each other. We show that there exists an intermediate homophily level that minimizes the unemployment rate and maximizes the wages of low‐skilled workers. Complete integration does not maximize the welfare of low‐skilled workers, unless it improves their productivity. We argue that our model can explain the empirical findings on the labor market effects of the Moving‐to‐Opportunity experiment and the integration of immigrants.
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
42. When Labor’s Lost: Health, Family Life, Incarceration, and Education in a Time of Declining Economic Opportunity for Low-Skilled Men
- Author
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Mark Duggan and Courtney Coile
- Subjects
Receipt ,Economics and Econometrics ,education.field_of_study ,Earnings ,Mechanical Engineering ,05 social sciences ,Population ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Context (language use) ,Economic stagnation ,Management Science and Operations Research ,Family life ,03 medical and health sciences ,Economic opportunity ,0302 clinical medicine ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,030212 general & internal medicine ,050207 economics ,education ,Low skilled - Abstract
The economic progress of US men has stagnated in recent decades. The labor force participation rate of men ages 25–54 peaked in the mid-1960s and has declined since then (according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics), while men’s real median earnings have been flat since the early 1970s. These population averages mask considerably larger declines in participation among less-educated and non-white men as well as substantial increases in wage inequality. In this paper, we seek to illuminate the broader context in which prime-age men are experiencing economic stagnation. We explore changes for prime-age men over time in education, mortality, morbidity, disability program receipt, family structure, and incarceration rates. We focus on prime-age men, namely those ages 25–54, and on the years 1980–2016 (or 2017 when possible), encompassing much of the period of reduced economic progress for low-skilled men.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. ‘High-Skilled Good, Low-Skilled Bad?’ British, Polish and Romanian Attitudes Towards Low-Skilled EU Migration
- Author
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Alexandra Bulat
- Subjects
Labour economics ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Romanian ,05 social sciences ,Immigration ,Context (language use) ,Public opinion ,Preference ,language.human_language ,0506 political science ,Brexit ,Political science ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,language ,050207 economics ,business ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Low skilled ,media_common - Abstract
A new skills-based immigration system, with a preference for the highly-skilled, is central to UK policy debates in the Brexit context, arguably responding to majority public opinion on migration. Through qualitative fieldwork with British, Polish and Romanian citizens living in two local authorities in England, this paper shows what participants understand by ‘low-skilled’ and how there is broad support of those who ‘contribute’, but are ‘controlled’ at the same time. Migrants’ narratives of downskilling also illustrate why the category of ‘low-skilled’ migration needs to be seen through a more critical lens in research and policymaking.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Low-Skilled Employment in a New Immigration Regime: Challenges and Opportunities for Business Transitions
- Author
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Anne E. Green
- Subjects
Flexibility (engineering) ,Labour economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Supply chain ,05 social sciences ,Immigration ,050209 industrial relations ,Face (sociological concept) ,Business model ,Free movement ,0506 political science ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Business ,European union ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Low skilled ,media_common - Abstract
In an era of free movement UK employers have had ready access to a supply of labour from the European Union to fill low-skilled jobs. This has enabled them to adopt business models, operating within broader supply chains, that take advantage of this source of labour and the flexibility that many migrant workers – especially those who are new arrivals to the UK – are prepared to offer them. Drawing mainly on evidence from employers on the role of migrant workers in selected sectors with a substantial proportion of low-skilled jobs, this article explores the challenges and opportunities they face in transitioning to a new post-Brexit immigration regime.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Critical Review on the Duration of Low-skilled Foreign Workers(E-9)
- Author
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Lee Eun Chae and Park, Jae-Young
- Subjects
business.industry ,Re entry ,Medicine ,Demographic economics ,Duration (project management) ,business ,Low skilled - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The Geography of Occupational Concentration Among Low-Skilled Immigrants
- Author
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Cathy Yang Liu and Eric Joseph van Holm
- Subjects
Urban Studies ,Economics and Econometrics ,Geography ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Spatial ecology ,Microdata (statistics) ,Geographic variation ,Demographic economics ,Development ,Census ,Low skilled ,media_common - Abstract
Employment concentration among low-skilled immigrants is a well-documented phenomenon in the U.S. labor market though its temporal and spatial patterns are less well examined. With Census microdata, the authors trace detailed occupational niches from 1990 to 2010 for all immigrants, as well as Asian and Latino immigrants separately, to understand how these niches have evolved over the past two decades. Using the Herfindahl−Hirschman Index measure, the authors further capture the geographic variation in relative occupational concentration across metropolitan statistical areas and test what metropolitan-level contexts and policies help explain such differences. The authors find that metropolitan areas with larger total and immigrant populations, greater human capital, higher residential mobility, and more diverse economies have expanded low-skilled immigrants’ occupational choices. Conversely, policies such as higher minimum wages and greater union membership may, in fact, increase occupational concentration, at least for some groups.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. TEACHERS’ PERCEPTIONS IN ENHANCING THE PERFORMANCE OF LOW-SKILLED STUDENTS
- Author
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Oluyinka Ayodele Solomon and Anatalia Narciso Endozo
- Subjects
Medical education ,Perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychology ,Low skilled ,media_common - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. How applicable are dormant buds in cryopreservation of horticultural woody plant crops? The Malus case
- Author
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C. T. Chao, H. Blackburn, J. D. Tanner, and M. M. Jenderek
- Subjects
Germplasm ,Horticulture ,Prunus ,Malus ,Genetic resources ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Cryopreservation ,Low skilled ,Woody plant - Abstract
Using dormant buds (DB) for germplasm cryopreservation was published few decades ago and since then, dormant buds have been used to preserve genetic resources of selected horticultural woody plant species. The advantages of employing DB in preservation are widely known; the most relevance is no requirements of aseptic cultures, high processing throughput and involvement of a relatively low skilled technical support; but the method has also shortcomings, such as seasonality of processing and lack of procedural modifications that might support preservation of all accessions in a collection. The US, NLGRP cryopreserved DB of 2168 unique Malus (Mill.) accessions (among 51 species) with a ≥40% post cryo viability. The method worked well for all accessions in 20 species, for ≥90% of accessions in six species and at a various percent (0-89%) in the remaining 25 species. For species with the largest number of processed accessions, the M. domestica, Borkh., M. hybrid and M. sieversii (Ledeb.) M. Roem. (1355, 326 and 128 cryopreserved accessions, respectively), the percent of accessions responding favorable to the DB method was high (96, 96 and 82%). The results indicated variability in Malus DB response to liquid nitrogen exposure; similar results were recorded in the Pyrus L. collections. Procedural refinements of the DB cryopreservation method could increase the method applicability to a much higher number of Malus species and its use in other collections of horticultural woody plants like Prunus L. and Pyrus L.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The minimum wage and the Great Recession: Evidence of effects on the employment and income trajectories of low-skilled workers
- Author
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Michael Wither and Jeffrey Clemens
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,05 social sciences ,Percentage point ,Redistribution (cultural anthropology) ,jel:J21 ,Great recession ,jel:I38 ,0502 economics and business ,jel:J38 ,Range (statistics) ,Economics ,Income growth ,Demographic economics ,jel:J08 ,050207 economics ,Minimum wage ,Survey of Income and Program Participation ,health care economics and organizations ,Finance ,Low skilled ,050205 econometrics - Abstract
We estimate the minimum wage's effects on low-skilled workers' employment and income trajectories. Our approach exploits two dimensions of the data we analyze. First, we compare workers in states that were bound by recent increases in the federal minimum wage to workers in states that were not. Second, we use 12 months of baseline data to divide low-skilled workers into a "target" group, whose baseline wage rates were directly affected, and a "within-state control" group with slightly higher baseline wage rates. Over three subsequent years, we find that binding minimum wage increases had significant, negative effects on the employment and income growth of targeted workers. Lost income reflects contributions from employment declines, increased probabilities of working without pay (i.e., an "internship" effect), and lost wage growth associated with reductions in experience accumulation. Methodologically, we show that our approach identifies targeted workers more precisely than the demographic and industrial proxies used regularly in the literature. Additionally, because we identify targeted workers on a population-wide basis, our approach is relatively well suited for extrapolating to estimates of the minimum wage's effects on aggregate employment. Over the late 2000s, the average effective minimum wage rose by 30 percent across the United States. We estimate that these minimum wage increases reduced the national employment-to-population ratio by 0.7 percentage point.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The changing texture of the city-size wage differential in Chinese cities – Effects of skill and identity
- Author
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Liqun Pan, Pundarik Mukhopadhaya, and Jing Li
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Rural migrant ,050204 development studies ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Wage ,Identity (social science) ,Differential (mechanical device) ,City size ,0502 economics and business ,Propensity score matching ,Economics ,Household income ,Demographic economics ,050207 economics ,Finance ,Low skilled ,media_common - Abstract
This study examines the city-size wage premium (CSWP) for local urban hukou holders (citizens) and rural migrants by utilizing data from the Chinese Household Income Project surveys (CHIP 2002 and 2013) employing OLS and Propensity Score Matching method. Heterogeneity of skills (measured by level of education) is found to be one determinant of the city-size wage disparity. But irrespective of skills, citizens receive a higher city-size premium than the rural migrants; nevertheless, the premium received by rural migrants has increased over the past few years. Within the similar occupation and type of firm, a highly skilled citizen received a CSWP of Yuan 880.08 in 2013 (Yuan 347.48 in 2002) on average per month. Whereas, a highly skilled rural migrant received an average monthly premium of Yuan 601.71 in 2013, and an insignificant premium in 2002. The corresponding values for low skilled citizens and rural migrants in 2013 are Yuan 415.67 and 267.27 respectively. Our results establish that there has been a positive effect on rural migrants from the relaxation of policies and labour laws, and a move towards equalization within the same level of skills.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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