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The Impact of Learning on Women's Labour Market Transitions

[journal article]

Haasler, Simone

Abstract

Women play an increasingly important role in the labour market and as wage earners. Moreover, in many countries, young women have outperformed men in terms of educational attainment and qualification. Still, women’s human capital investment does not pay off as it does for men as they are still si... view more

Women play an increasingly important role in the labour market and as wage earners. Moreover, in many countries, young women have outperformed men in terms of educational attainment and qualification. Still, women’s human capital investment does not pay off as it does for men as they are still significantly disadvantaged on the labour market. Based on a qualitative empirical investigation with women in their mid-career, this article investigates the role of learning for women’s labour market participation and career paths. Women’s careers complexly intersect with role expectations, family needs, the career of the partner and anticipation of low returns of educational investment. This is typically reflected in discontinuous employment, part-time work and women’s secondary wage earner position in the family. Furthermore, women qualified at the intermediate skills level are more likely to move horizontally in their career than vertically. Horizontal mobility thereby requires significant engagement with learning as the German labour market usually requires a formal qualification to realise a career change. Learning and further training thus become instrumental to facilitate and support women’s career transitions, which are often aimed at re-entering regular employment after longer periods of family-related interruptions and/or to remain qualified in jobs in the social, health and educational fields, all of which are female dominated. Ultimately, women’s significant engagement with continuing learning is not primarily expected to support career advancement and vertical mobility, particularly as it can neither alter discontinuities of employment nor the German-specific nexus between welfare, family and education policies and the labour market. This challenges the lifelong learning rhetoric insofar as one key aim of lifelong learning policies is to support labour market inclusion and the mobility of disadvantaged groups.... view less

Keywords
change of occupation; occupational mobility; expectation; learning process; education system; career expectation; woman; gender-specific factors; women's employment; narrative interview; role; Federal Republic of Germany; lifelong learning; human capital; vocational education; learning; exploration; labor market policy; labor market segmentation; deprivation; family policy; employment history; horizontal mobility; advanced vocational education; transitional labor market

Classification
Vocational Training, Adult Education
Employment Research

Document language
English

Publication Year
2014

Page/Pages
p. 354-369

Journal
Research in Comparative and International Education, 9 (2014) 3

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2304/rcie.2014.9.3.354

ISSN
1745-4999

Status
Postprint; peer reviewed

Licence
Deposit Licence - No Redistribution, No Modifications


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.