Seminar: 1.07.211 Schwerpunkt Arbeitsmarkt: Income and labour market inequalities in a comparative perspective (Lehrsprache Englisch, Prüfungsleistung Deutsch oder Englisch) - Details

Seminar: 1.07.211 Schwerpunkt Arbeitsmarkt: Income and labour market inequalities in a comparative perspective (Lehrsprache Englisch, Prüfungsleistung Deutsch oder Englisch) - Details

You are not logged into Stud.IP.

General information

Course name Seminar: 1.07.211 Schwerpunkt Arbeitsmarkt: Income and labour market inequalities in a comparative perspective (Lehrsprache Englisch, Prüfungsleistung Deutsch oder Englisch)
Subtitle
Course number 1.07.211
Semester SoSe2018
Current number of participants 5
expected number of participants 25
Home institute Department of Social Sciences
Courses type Seminar in category Teaching
First date Monday, 09.04.2018 12:00 - 14:00, Room: (A06 4-411)
Type/Form S 2SWS
Performance record The course grade will be based on a short presentation and a written elaboration (approx. 8-10,000 words).
Lehrsprache englisch
ECTS points 3

Rooms and times

(A06 4-411)
Monday: 12:00 - 14:00, weekly (12x)

Module assignments

Comment/Description

In industrialized societies, participation in social life is closely linked to income from work and thus access to the labor market. The Master module "Labor Market and Inequality" starts with the question which occupational structures characterize the German and European labor market and where dividing lines between "outsiders" and "insiders" on the labor market run. This is partcularly relevant for the egalitarian employment regimes of Europe. In the first part of the seminar, the focus will be on approaches to and empirical research on the "inequality of income opportunities". Afterwards, interrelations between selected social groups (long-term unemployed, young people, migrants and women) and relevant institutional conditions (social security systems and activation policies, education systems and protection clauses, family policies, technological developments and social redistribution policies) are discussed (Part 2).
In the complementary workshop (Wed 12 a.m. - 2 p.m., room A04 1-139), selected topics of the seminar will be expanded. Students will familiarize themselves with relevant data sets and carry out their own empirical analyses using the EU-SILC or other comparative datasets.

Admission settings

The course is part of admission "Anmeldung gesperrt (global)".
Erzeugt durch den Stud.IP-Support
The following rules apply for the admission:
  • Admission locked.
Back