Maximizing employability and entrepreneurial success: a training program for highly skilled seniors transitioning into freelance consulting [PDF]
Siavash Atarodi +2 more
openalex +1 more source
ABSTRACT The twin transition to a green and digital economy is linked to the need for new skills in the workforce. However, given the scale and speed of change, it is challenging for policymakers, employers, and educational institutions to predict what skills will be in demand and how to create them.
Lukas Graf +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Skill acquisition in TVET and access to employment in Nigeria: a gender perspective. [PDF]
Emah IE, Doneys P, Kusakabe K, Pathak S.
europepmc +1 more source
The Polysemy of Skills: Exploring Country‐Specific Approaches in the Knowledge Economy
ABSTRACT This paper investigates how the concept of “skills” operates as a malleable governance instrument in EU policy, allowing for coordination despite diverse national priorities. Analyzing National Implementation Plans (NIPs) of the Osnabrück Declaration, we examine how Germany, France, Sweden, and Spain interpret and operationalize skill ...
Marina Cino Pagliarello +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Employability resources of unemployed adults: longitudinal effects of a group career intervention. [PDF]
de Carvalho CL +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
3G Internet Diffusion and Secondary Education Attainment: Evidence of Opportunity Cost in Vietnam
ABSTRACT Mobile internet diffusion has led to significant societal and economic transformations since its early diffusion, especially in the Global South. This has implied changes in human capital formation, particularly through education, and has reshaped the trade‐off between education and employment, especially among the younger population.
Trang Thi Pham, Bernardo Caldarola
wiley +1 more source
The Role of Technical and Vocational Education relative to Academic Schooling in the Transition of the Youth to Labour Markets in Kenya. [PDF]
Mujuri B, Kathomi I.
europepmc +1 more source
Does the stepping‐stone effect of temporary agency employment vary over the business cycle?
Abstract We examine the cyclicality of the stepping‐stone effect of temporary agency work in Germany across three business cycles using administrative data and a timing‐of‐events model. We estimate in‐ and post‐treatment effects and their response to the unemployment rate.
Elke J. Jahn, Michael Rosholm
wiley +1 more source
IS THIS (TELE)WORKING? A path model analysis of the relationship between telework, job demands and job resources, and sustainable employability. [PDF]
Beekman EM +4 more
europepmc +1 more source

