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Getting Work - Philadelphia, 184-195 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R849
Discovery Miles 8 490
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Getting Work - Philadelphia, 184-195 (Paperback)
Series: Pennsylvania Paperbacks
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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"An engagingly written, thorough examination of the . . .
day-to-day working of the labor market."--"Journal of Economic
History" "Exemplary. . . . A major contribution."--"Journal of
American History" "Licht contributes greatly to an understanding of
the work force, the community, and the role of government and
educational institutions on the economy."--"Philadelphia Inquirer"
"This is the way labor history should be practiced: not a fable
about good and evil, but an engagingly written, thorough
examination of the mundane, yet important, day-to-day working of
the labor market."--"Journal of Economic History" "A comprehensive
treatment of how people became and remained workers in one of the
nation's largest cities, and in it are lessons for
today."--"Journal of Interdisciplinary History" How did working
people find jobs in the past? How has the process changed over time
for various groups of job seekers? Are outcomes influenced more by
general economic circumstances, by discriminatory practices in the
labor market, or by personal initiative and competence? To tackle
these questions, Walter Licht uses intensive primary-source
research--including surveys of thousands of workers conducted in
the decades from the 1920s to the 1950s--on a major industrial city
for a period of over one hundred years. He looks at when and how
workers secured their first jobs, schools and work, apprenticeship
programs, unions, the role of firms in structuring work
opportunities, the state as employer and as shaper of employment
conditions, and the problem of losing work. Licht also examines the
disparate labor market experiences of men and women and the effects
of race, ethnicity, age, and social standing on employment. Walter
Licht is Professor of History and Associate Dean at the University
of Pennsylvania. He is the author of "Working for the Railroad: The
Organization of Work in the Nineteenth Century" (recipient of the
Philip Taft Labor History Prize), "Industrializing America: The
Nineteenth Century," and coauthor of "Work Sights: Industrial
Philadelphia, 1890-1950."
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