Socio-economic achievement in Australian and Japanese segmented economies
Occupational prestige and earnings, together with 'over-' or 'underreward' in these respects relative to sociodemographic characteristics of the workforce, are used to aggregate Australian and Japanese industries into 2 economic sectors. Analyses the industrial structure of the s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European sociological review 1987-12, Vol.3 (Dec 87), p.243-257 |
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container_issue | Dec 87 |
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container_title | European sociological review |
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creator | Zagorski, K |
description | Occupational prestige and earnings, together with 'over-' or 'underreward' in these respects relative to sociodemographic characteristics of the workforce, are used to aggregate Australian and Japanese industries into 2 economic sectors. Analyses the industrial structure of the sectors and the detailed socioeconomic achievement patterns in different sectors. Social services constitute the core of the first sector; however, this also contains most modern manufacturing industries in Japan, and agriculture in Australia. (Abstract amended) |
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identifier | ISSN: 0266-7215 |
ispartof | European sociological review, 1987-12, Vol.3 (Dec 87), p.243-257 |
issn | 0266-7215 |
language | eng |
recordid | cdi_proquest_miscellaneous_57905535 |
source | Oxford University Press Journals Digital Archive Legacy; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing |
subjects | Australia Japan Men Segmentation theory Socioeconomic attainment |
title | Socio-economic achievement in Australian and Japanese segmented economies |
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