The Global Auction: The Broken Promises of Education, Jobs, and Incomes
Autor Phillip Brown, Hugh Lauder, David Ashtonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 ian 2011
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780199731688
ISBN-10: 0199731683
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 241 x 165 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0199731683
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 241 x 165 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
a very important contribution to the debate on skills and inequality.
a brilliant new book
very readable, powerful and unsettling analysis
it is aimed at a general public who, the authors argue, must be engaged in fight for a new opportunity bargain. Brown, Lauder, and Ashton pull this off with great skill. It is a very pacey read, communicating not only the urgency of the task at hand, but the social and political costs for all of us if we fail to look it squarely in the face ... this is a very important book, despite its uncomfortable truths.
The authors are fine researchers and this is a deeply compelling volume ... it should be read by anyone interested in postsecondary education, jobs, and incomes
It is not often that a book is published that so neatly and concisely sums up the fundamentally ideological nature of a set of beliefs about the role that education is expected to play in the global knowledge economy ... Phillip Brown, Hugh Lauder, and David Ashton should be congratulated for writing such a book, which brilliantly takes on a discourse that has become both ubiquitous and hegemonic.
This is a very important book ... their critique of the present state of global capitalism is both timely and convincing.
This is a challenging and very timely book. Written in an arresting, graphic style, it calls into question the comfortable belief that global capitalism can be a source of endlessly rising upward mobility in western societies, provided only that these societies continue with programs of educational expansion and reform. The gauntlet is thrown down to economists wedded to human capital theory and to sociologists who see education as the great engine of social mobility.
The Global Auction is a must-read for parents, college students, and policymakers. It poses a central contradiction. We press the message to our children: 'Study. Get degrees. Get a good job. And you will live the good life.' And policymakers reinforce the drumbeat by insisting that more and better education is necessary to stay ahead of our economic competitors. But such claims have become platitudes for many individuals, dramatically at odds with the realities of income stagnation and poor job prospects. The authors explain how this dramatic breakdown between rhetoric and reality happened and how we might reconstruct an alternative future in which education becomes meaningful and fulfilling in its own right.
The Global Auction deals with one of the most pressing issues of our times: how the significant expansion in the labor supply available to multinational corporations is leading to dramatic shifts in the location of employment around the world. It draws on years of in-depth research, offering valuable insights for both academics and business leaders.
Brown, Lauder, and Ashton's book is brilliantly argued and provides a wakeup call to global citizens everywhere. There is no substitute for the regulation of global capitalism in the interests of the many rather than the few, and this book slams the door on the last set of excuses for maintaining the current system - that somehow the educated will escape the race to the bottom.
a brilliant new book
very readable, powerful and unsettling analysis
it is aimed at a general public who, the authors argue, must be engaged in fight for a new opportunity bargain. Brown, Lauder, and Ashton pull this off with great skill. It is a very pacey read, communicating not only the urgency of the task at hand, but the social and political costs for all of us if we fail to look it squarely in the face ... this is a very important book, despite its uncomfortable truths.
The authors are fine researchers and this is a deeply compelling volume ... it should be read by anyone interested in postsecondary education, jobs, and incomes
It is not often that a book is published that so neatly and concisely sums up the fundamentally ideological nature of a set of beliefs about the role that education is expected to play in the global knowledge economy ... Phillip Brown, Hugh Lauder, and David Ashton should be congratulated for writing such a book, which brilliantly takes on a discourse that has become both ubiquitous and hegemonic.
This is a very important book ... their critique of the present state of global capitalism is both timely and convincing.
This is a challenging and very timely book. Written in an arresting, graphic style, it calls into question the comfortable belief that global capitalism can be a source of endlessly rising upward mobility in western societies, provided only that these societies continue with programs of educational expansion and reform. The gauntlet is thrown down to economists wedded to human capital theory and to sociologists who see education as the great engine of social mobility.
The Global Auction is a must-read for parents, college students, and policymakers. It poses a central contradiction. We press the message to our children: 'Study. Get degrees. Get a good job. And you will live the good life.' And policymakers reinforce the drumbeat by insisting that more and better education is necessary to stay ahead of our economic competitors. But such claims have become platitudes for many individuals, dramatically at odds with the realities of income stagnation and poor job prospects. The authors explain how this dramatic breakdown between rhetoric and reality happened and how we might reconstruct an alternative future in which education becomes meaningful and fulfilling in its own right.
The Global Auction deals with one of the most pressing issues of our times: how the significant expansion in the labor supply available to multinational corporations is leading to dramatic shifts in the location of employment around the world. It draws on years of in-depth research, offering valuable insights for both academics and business leaders.
Brown, Lauder, and Ashton's book is brilliantly argued and provides a wakeup call to global citizens everywhere. There is no substitute for the regulation of global capitalism in the interests of the many rather than the few, and this book slams the door on the last set of excuses for maintaining the current system - that somehow the educated will escape the race to the bottom.
Notă biografică
Phillip Brown is Distinguished Research Professor in the School of Social Sciences at Cardiff University.Hugh Lauder is Professor of Education and Political Economy at the University of Bath. David Ashton is Honorary Professor at the Cardiff University School of Social Sciences and Emeritus Professor at Leicester University