posted on 2010-09-21, 15:18authored byJohn Goodwin, Henrietta O'Connor
Using data from a little known project, 'Adjustment of Young Workers to Work Situations and Adult Roles', carried out in Leicester between 1962 and 1964, this paper aims to re-examine the extent to which transitions during this time were complex, lengthy, non-linear and single-step and explores the assumed linearity and uncomplicated nature of school to work transitions in the 1960s. It is argued that earlier research on youth transitions has tended to understate the level of complexity that characterised youth transitions in the early 1960s and 1970s. Instead, authors exploring transition during this period concentrated on 'macro' or more structural issues such as class and gender. It is suggested that transitions in the 1960s were characterised by individual level complexity that has largely been ignored by others exploring school to work transitions.
History
Citation
Centre for Labour Market Studies, Working Paper 42
Published in
Centre for Labour Market Studies
Publisher
Centre for Labour Market Studies, University of Leicester
Available date
2010-09-21
Publisher version
http://www.clms.le.ac.uk/research/wpapers.lasso
Notes
This paper was published as Working Paper 42 by the Centre for Labour Market Studies, University of Leicester. It is also available from http://www.clms.le.ac.uk/research/wpapers.lasso. A paper of the same title, which is available at https://lra.le.ac.uk/handle/2381/990, was subsequently published as a journal article in Sociology, 2005, 39 (2), pp.201-220.