The New Careers: Individual Action and Economic ChangeSAGE, 28 lug 1999 - 181 pagine `To career used to mean to swerve wildly or to go swiftly. In this beautifully argued, richly documented, original, liberating work, Arthur, Inksen, and Pringle demonstrate that the new careers once more are about swift swerves, unexpected agency, and enacted opportunities and constraints. Readers will think about the future in ways they never imagined possible. This is a good book. People need to get it in their hands to see how good it is'- Karl Weick, University of Michigan The New Careers offers a major new approach to the concept of career and the relation of the individual to the contemporary workplace. It shows that our traditional conceptions of careers are rooted in the stable conditions of the Indus |
Sommario
Exploring New Patterns of Career Behavior | 22 |
Enactment in Career Behavior | 39 |
Engaging with Unfamiliar Situations | 59 |
Pursuing Career Pathways | 80 |
Rounding Out Career | 101 |
Turning Career Competencies into Career Capital | 120 |
Investing Career Capital in Social Institutions | 142 |
From Present to Future | 163 |
Index | 181 |
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
The New Careers: Individual Action and Economic Change Michael Arthur,Kerr Inkson,Judith Pringle Anteprima limitata - 1999 |
The New Careers: Individual Action and Economic Change Michael Arthur,Kerr Inkson,Judith Pringle Anteprima non disponibile - 1999 |
The New Careers: Individual Action and Economic Change Michael Arthur,Kerr Inkson,Judith Pringle Anteprima non disponibile - 1999 |
Parole e frasi comuni
accumulation adaptation agency Arthur and Rousseau Barbara become boundaries boundaryless benefits boundaryless career Brett career actors career behavior career competencies career development career experience career investments career stories career theory Catherine Chapter choices client communion company's corporate cycle Darren early career economic employment enactment of careers environment ethnic example expertise exploration flexible Fotex furniture music Gina improvisation individual industry informed direction Infotex institutions interview involved Karl Weick knowing-why learning lives long-term M.B. Arthur manager managerial marketing ment mobility moves networks occupational groups opportunities optometrist organization organizational overseas oyster farmer part-time partners pattern period Peter physical therapy professional qualifications reciprocal relationships research participants restructuring role sample scripts self-designed apprenticeship self-employment sense sensemaking situations skills social capital stage theater Thousand Oaks unfolding University of Auckland University Press vocational volunteer wanted Weick Wendy's women workers workforce
