Moore, Phoebe (2006) Global knowledge capitalism, self-woven safety nets, and the crisis of employability. Global Society, 20 (4). pp. 453-473. ISSN 1360-0826
Full content URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13600820600929812
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Item Type: | Article |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
Abstract
In today’s global political economy, knowledge has become an asset, and workers are expected to arm themselves with an appropriate shield of knowledge that will make, and keep themselves employable in the era of flexibility and technological innovation. The emphasis on employability of individuals through workers’ creation of what I call selfwoven safety nets demonstrates an elite-led project to reduce government responsibility for employment welfare. The replacement of responsibility for training of the self, to the self, re-articulates coercion inherent to ongoing capitalist expansion, substituting workers’ political representation with what is ironically intended to result in workplace emancipation. This article looks at the case of worker training education policy in South Korea after the economic crisis of 1997 to make this claim.
Additional Information: | In today’s global political economy, knowledge has become an asset, and workers are expected to arm themselves with an appropriate shield of knowledge that will make, and keep themselves employable in the era of flexibility and technological innovation. The emphasis on employability of individuals through workers’ creation of what I call selfwoven safety nets demonstrates an elite-led project to reduce government responsibility for employment welfare. The replacement of responsibility for training of the self, to the self, re-articulates coercion inherent to ongoing capitalist expansion, substituting workers’ political representation with what is ironically intended to result in workplace emancipation. This article looks at the case of worker training education policy in South Korea after the economic crisis of 1997 to make this claim. |
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Keywords: | South Korea, Employability, Employee welfare, Global governance, Globalization, Interdisciplinary Studies, Political Sociology |
Subjects: | G Mathematical and Computer Sciences > G500 Information Systems |
Divisions: | Lincoln International Business School |
ID Code: | 421 |
Deposited On: | 06 Dec 2006 |
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