Results 151 to 160 of about 1,752 (205)

A comparative study of EQ-5D-5L and SF-6D scales based on patients receiving oral anticoagulant therapy. [PDF]

open access: yesHealth Qual Life Outcomes
Dong S   +7 more
europepmc   +1 more source

The precariat’s downfall

Maska, 2020
Abstract The piece is a review of the Slovenian edition of the book The Precariat: The New Dangerous Class by British economist Guy Standing. In addition to the standard review process – the presentation of the topic and evaluation – the text encompasses a broader interpretation of theses in the local political context and attempts to ...
exaly   +2 more sources

Precariat women’s experiences to undertake an entrepreneurial training program

open access: yesJournal of Business Research
Women aged over 50 in Australia are becoming increasingly reliant on long-term welfare. Individual characteristics, societal norms, industry practices, and government policy create a multi-factorial, precariat population who have difficulties finding ...
Dhara Shāh
exaly   +4 more sources

Precariat, education and technologies: Towards a global class identity

open access: yesPolicy Futures in Education, 2015
In this interview Guy Standing outlines the main links between the precariat and the universal basic income. He briefly comments on the relationships of his work to traditional Marxism, and expands his critique of the precariat towards information and ...
Guy Standing, Petar Jandric
exaly   +2 more sources

From “the Chosen” to the Precariat:

2018
Beginning in the 1970s, local boosters in the U.S. South offered lucrative incentives to attract foreign manufacturing firms, who, in turn, promised to uplift working-class southerners’ lives and modernize benighted rural areas with state-of-the-art “greenfield” plants and cutting-edge production techniques.
David M. Anderson, Andrew C. McKevitt
openaire   +1 more source

From the Subaltern to the Precariat

boundary 2, 2015
Precarity is a double condition. On the one hand, it denotes a socioeconomic position of insecurity and poverty, often particularly associated with statelessness. On the other, as is here argued, it denotes an anthropological or existential condition, one for which human beings are constitutionally unable to fully ground themselves in the world and for
openaire   +4 more sources

The artistic precariat

Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 2012
This article examines how some artists have collectively negotiated precarity in Toronto’s cultural sector during the last 2 decades through two arts experiments: the Waterfront Trail Artists’ Association and Don Blanche. The social scientific scholarly literature on arts funding, precarious employment and community economies provides an entry point ...
Alison Bain, Heather McLean
openaire   +2 more sources

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