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Work and Idleness develops the view that redistributing employment
is a feasible capitalist' solution, not just to the unemployment
which particular groups suffer, but also to the work that others
have to contend with, including many women. Putting the
redistribution of employment on the policy agenda opens up debate
on how to ensure a more equitable and fulfilling relationship
between the ways we gain our livelihoods and the lives we lead.
Growing insecurity in labour markets and changing patterns in the
commodification of labour have led to a redistribution of paid and
unpaid labour time as the structure of power relations, the gender
order, discrimination, and state regulation have been modified. The
first main trend affecting insecurity is mass unemployment and the
growth of workless households. A second notable trend is a
gender-based redistribution of hours worked. The third major trend
is a shift from full-time waged work to full-time self-employment.
Part I of this book presents the main economic theories driving the
continuing divide between the intensification of work and the
extension of idleness. Part II documents the ways in which the
shift to mass idleness in advanced industrial countries has hit
some groups particularly hard: the youngest and oldest age groups
and other groups, including disabled workers, have traditionally
been subject to discrimination in the labor markets. Part III
provides a set of policy prescriptions.
The rise of the information age and the digital economy has
dramatically changed engineering. With tremendous advances in
computing and communication systems, causing major organizational
upheaval, all fueled by complexity, globalization, short cycle
times, and lean supply chains, the functions of engineers have
significantly changed. Engineers must be technically savvy and have
product management and costing skills all while working in a
distributed and often unstable environment. This new edition
textbook is updated to cover the integration of cost, risk, value,
scheduling, and information technologies going beyond basic
engineering economics. Engineering Economics of Life Cycle Cost
Analysis, Second Edition offers a systems and life cycle or total
ownership cost perspective. It presents advanced costing techniques
such as simulation-based costing, decision analysis, complex
systems costing, software, big data, and cloud computing
estimation. Examples and problems demonstrating these techniques
with real-world applications are also included. All engineers will
find this book useful, but it is mainly written for systems
engineers, engineering management, and industrial engineers along
with graduate courses on advanced engineering economic analysis and
cost management, and financial analysis for engineers. To assist
with classroom teaching, the textbook provides an instructor's
manual for qualified course adoption and downloadable Excel
solutions.
This book offers a critical reconstruction of the double movement,
the central thesis of Karl Polanyi's The Great Transformation, one
of the most influential books of the 20th century. The double
movement is the establishment of a free market economy and the
subsequent effort by society to ameliorate the destructive effects
of the market. In Polanyi's bold vision, the double movement
constituted the hidden gear of social change and historical
transformation within capitalism. The book is a forensic
examination and critique of Polanyi's argument. It develops an
interpretive framework of the double movement as four interrelated
social processes: the establishment of the self-regulating market,
the rise of a market society that deepens and extends market
imperatives, a social protection phase that constrains the market
and safeguards society, and the contradictions and crises that
result from this clash of social principles. The book will be an
indispensable guide for students and scholars across the social
sciences which illuminates the relevance of Polanyi's insights to a
critical understanding of the contemporary era -the scourge of
insecurity and inequality, the multiple crises of neoliberalism,
the rise of right wing populism- as well as those interested in
egalitarian and emancipatory alternatives to capitalism.
At a time when families break up and employment is often
short-term, society is increasingly forced to operate against a
background of insecurity. Insecure Times looks at how this sense of
risk and instability has affected the major institutions of social
life.
With examples and research taken from a range of European and
North American societies today, this innovative text on
contemporary society discusses such major issues as:
* the causes of social and economic insecurity
* insecurity and modern capitalism
* the role of the state
* insecurity and housing
* contemporary family life.
At a time when families break up and employment is often
short-term, society is increasingly forced to operate against a
background of insecurity. Insecure Times looks at how this sense of
risk and instability has affected the major institutions of social
life.
With examples and research taken from a range of European and
North American societies today, this innovative text on
contemporary society discusses such major issues as:
* the causes of social and economic insecurity
* insecurity and modern capitalism
* the role of the state
* insecurity and housing
* contemporary family life.
Work and Idleness develops the view that redistributing employment
is a `feasible capitalist' solution, not just to the unemployment
which particular groups suffer, but also to the work that others
have to contend with, including many women. Putting the
redistribution of employment on the policy agenda opens up debate
on how to ensure a more equitable and fulfilling relationship
between the ways we gain our livelihoods and the lives we lead.
Growing insecurity in labour markets and changing patterns in the
commodification of labour have led to a redistribution of paid and
unpaid labour time as the structure of power relations, the gender
order, discrimination, and state regulation have been modified. The
first main trend affecting insecurity is mass unemployment and the
growth of workless households. A second notable trend is a
gender-based redistribution of hours worked. The third major trend
is a shift from full-time waged work to full-time self-employment.
Part I of this book presents the main economic theories driving the
continuing divide between the intensification of work and the
extension of idleness. Part II documents the ways in which the
shift to mass idleness in advanced industrial countries has hit
some groups particularly hard: the youngest and oldest age groups
and other groups, including disabled workers, have traditionally
been subject to discrimination in the labor markets. Part III
provides a set of policy prescriptions.
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