The Relationship between Jobs and Social Cohesion : Some examples from Ethnography

This paper uses selected case studies to illustrate some of the complex relationships that link employment and social cohesion. For example, despite harsh working conditions, retail garment manufacturing contributed to the transformation of gender relationship in Bangladesh by giving women the opportunity to acquire skills, control over resources, and greater independence. Conversely, the downsizing of industries in the US, Argentina, Bulgaria, and Guyana not only hurt households financially; it undermined their sense of dignity, self-worth, and trust in institutions, and severely weakened social ties within their communities. Chronic unemployment and underemployment does more than erode social cohesion—in the Arab Spring, it helped catalyze a broad-based social movement that overturned regimes; in the UK, a pervasive sense of exclusion from economic life provoked a disorganized and violent reaction. Since the relationship between jobs and social cohesion is mediated by institutions and policies, policy makers should be more proactive in considering policies to help cushion the impacts of changing labor markets and/or joblessness in the interests of maintain social stability and cohesion.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dudwick, Nora
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012-10
Subjects:garment industry, joblessness, industrial retrenchment, bad jobs,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12144
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spelling dig-okr-10986121442021-04-23T14:02:59Z The Relationship between Jobs and Social Cohesion : Some examples from Ethnography Dudwick, Nora garment industry joblessness industrial retrenchment bad jobs This paper uses selected case studies to illustrate some of the complex relationships that link employment and social cohesion. For example, despite harsh working conditions, retail garment manufacturing contributed to the transformation of gender relationship in Bangladesh by giving women the opportunity to acquire skills, control over resources, and greater independence. Conversely, the downsizing of industries in the US, Argentina, Bulgaria, and Guyana not only hurt households financially; it undermined their sense of dignity, self-worth, and trust in institutions, and severely weakened social ties within their communities. Chronic unemployment and underemployment does more than erode social cohesion—in the Arab Spring, it helped catalyze a broad-based social movement that overturned regimes; in the UK, a pervasive sense of exclusion from economic life provoked a disorganized and violent reaction. Since the relationship between jobs and social cohesion is mediated by institutions and policies, policy makers should be more proactive in considering policies to help cushion the impacts of changing labor markets and/or joblessness in the interests of maintain social stability and cohesion. 2013-01-18T20:01:58Z 2013-01-18T20:01:58Z 2012-10 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12144 en_US Background Paper for the World Development Report 2013; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research North Africa Middle East ARGENTINA Bangladesh Bulgaria Guyana United Kingdom UNITED STATES
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language en_US
topic garment industry
joblessness
industrial retrenchment
bad jobs
garment industry
joblessness
industrial retrenchment
bad jobs
spellingShingle garment industry
joblessness
industrial retrenchment
bad jobs
garment industry
joblessness
industrial retrenchment
bad jobs
Dudwick, Nora
The Relationship between Jobs and Social Cohesion : Some examples from Ethnography
description This paper uses selected case studies to illustrate some of the complex relationships that link employment and social cohesion. For example, despite harsh working conditions, retail garment manufacturing contributed to the transformation of gender relationship in Bangladesh by giving women the opportunity to acquire skills, control over resources, and greater independence. Conversely, the downsizing of industries in the US, Argentina, Bulgaria, and Guyana not only hurt households financially; it undermined their sense of dignity, self-worth, and trust in institutions, and severely weakened social ties within their communities. Chronic unemployment and underemployment does more than erode social cohesion—in the Arab Spring, it helped catalyze a broad-based social movement that overturned regimes; in the UK, a pervasive sense of exclusion from economic life provoked a disorganized and violent reaction. Since the relationship between jobs and social cohesion is mediated by institutions and policies, policy makers should be more proactive in considering policies to help cushion the impacts of changing labor markets and/or joblessness in the interests of maintain social stability and cohesion.
format Publications & Research :: Working Paper
topic_facet garment industry
joblessness
industrial retrenchment
bad jobs
author Dudwick, Nora
author_facet Dudwick, Nora
author_sort Dudwick, Nora
title The Relationship between Jobs and Social Cohesion : Some examples from Ethnography
title_short The Relationship between Jobs and Social Cohesion : Some examples from Ethnography
title_full The Relationship between Jobs and Social Cohesion : Some examples from Ethnography
title_fullStr The Relationship between Jobs and Social Cohesion : Some examples from Ethnography
title_full_unstemmed The Relationship between Jobs and Social Cohesion : Some examples from Ethnography
title_sort relationship between jobs and social cohesion : some examples from ethnography
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2012-10
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12144
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