Displaced Older Workers


Book Description







Displaced Older Workers


Book Description




A Twilight Zone Beetween Work and Retirement


Book Description

Abstract: Concerns over the labor market experience of older workers have increased as the American labor force has aged. We know that older workers are often more likely to be displaced and, after displacement, are unemployed longer and are more likely to drop out of the labor force. We know less about how unemployed older workers understand their life course disruption and what consequences they face as a result. I address these questions utilizing 55 semi-structured interviews conducted with unemployed workers aged 40 and older. Interviewees are aware that the economy, the job-search process, and employer preferences are barriers to reemployment. Influenced in part by these barriers, they face social psychological consequences of unemployment; namely, loss of trust in the traditional social contract of employment, reflection upon and questioning of identity, and feelings of isolation and depression. Within-group differences are discussed, as well as avenues for future research.




Losing Work, Moving on


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And synthesis / Peter J. Kuhn -- Displaced workers in the United States and the Netherlands / Joap H. Abbring ... [et al.] -- Worker displacement in Japan and Canada / Masahiro Abe ... [et al.] -- They get knocked down. do they get up again? / Jeff Borland ... [et al.] -- Worker displacement in France and Germany / Stefan Bender ... [et al.] -- Employment protection and the consequences for displaced workers / Karsten Albk, Marc Van Audenrode, and Martin Browning.




The Plight of Older Workers


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This open access book examines the economic, social, and psychological consequences of manufacturing plant closure at the individual level. Using an original data set of over 1,200 workers from Switzerland who lost their manufacturing jobs after the financial crisis of 2008, the author analyzes the determinants of reemployment, the sector of reemployment, and the change in wages over a two year period. In addition, coverage also explores how plant closure affects the social relationship between a displaced worker and his or her significant other, which includes a discussion of the coping strategies on the household level as well as how changes in a worker's social and occupational life affects overall satisfaction. Readers will discover that the burden of structural change disproportionately falls on the shoulders of workers aged 55 and older who often face substantial barriers when trying to return to employment. A larger portion of this group experience long-term unemployment and those who do manage to find a new job often suffer disproportionate wage loss. This result is intriguing in the context of the current demographic change and contradicts the common assumption that young and low-qualified individuals are at greatest risk of unemployment. Advanced age—and not low education—appears to be the primary obstacle to workers finding job satisfaction after being laid off because of market conditions.







Helping Displaced Older Workers Get Back Into Employment


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This good practice guide is based on the report "Industry Restructuring and Job Loss: Helping Older Workers Get Back into Employment" by Victor J. Callan and Kaye Bowman. The aim of the research was to identify evidence-based practices that led to successful skills transfer, re-skilling, training and the attainment of new jobs for older workers displaced from often lower-skilled jobs in the manufacturing industries. This guide informs employers, employment placement agencies and related support services, training providers and overall coordinating agencies in the design of programs that help displaced older workers find new jobs. Based on a review of past research and four Australian case studies, Callan and Bowman investigated the type and impact of the approaches used to assist displaced older workers in regions where industry restructuring has occurred.[For the research report: "Industry Restructuring and Job Loss: Helping Older Workers Get Back into Employment. Research Report" see ED56122.].




Forced Out


Book Description

Do societal inequalities limit the effectiveness of democratic regimes? And if so, why? And how? Addressing this question, Bernd Reiter focuses on the role of societal dynamics in undermining democracy in Brazil.Reiter explores the ways in which race, class, and gender in Brazil structure a society that is deeply divided between the included and the excluded'and where much of the population falls into the latter category. Tracing the mechanisms of the profound cultural resistance to genuine democratization that he finds dominant among the elite, his theoretically and empirically rich analysis offers an alternative way of understanding both the nature of Brazilian democracy and the democratization process throughout Latin America.