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Haydn Morgan; Harry Bowles; Anthony Bush – Journal of Education and Work, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic disproportionately affected young people in relation to their mental health, educational provision, and social development, impacting their employment prospects and future prosperity. In response, the United Kingdom government implemented a range of formal policy solutions to address issues around youth employability.…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Employment Potential, Nonformal Education
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Collins, Mary Elizabeth; Kuykendall, Shamekka; Ramirez, Milagros; Spindle-Jackson, Adrianna – Journal of Education and Work, 2022
Youth who are not engaged in school or work face many challenges as they transition into adulthood. In the United States, federal policy provides funding and oversight to a complex, community-based system of workforce development for this youth population, as well as adults with barriers to employment. The COVID-19 pandemic caused extensive…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Out of School Youth, Labor Force Development
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Lim, Jung-Yon; Lee, Young-Min – Journal of Education and Work, 2018
This study explores the patterns and characteristics of job mobility among Korean youth through sequential analysis. It verifies initial career formation patterns to identify important implications in developing policies for effective labor market performance, using 15 years of job history data from the Korean Labor & Income Panel of the Korea…
Descriptors: Occupational Mobility, Youth Employment, Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries
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Hulliger, Beat; Hong Thu, Nguyen Thi – Journal of Education and Work, 2019
Based on the Vietnamese Household Living Standard Survey (VHLSS) 2014, the factors of participation in education and/or labour market of Vietnamese adolescents in the age range 11 to 18 is studied. Children working too much, in particular at age 11 to 15, are actually in child labour, and also older adolescents may compromise their future due to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Youth Employment, Education
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Gallacher, Jim; Reeve, Fiona – Journal of Education and Work, 2019
This article considers the implications of a 'managed' approach to skills policy in Scotland, in which Government policy and the role of national institutional frameworks can be seen to be influential, and which contrasts with the more marketised approach which has been a central aspect of policy in England. A number of themes within these…
Descriptors: Government Role, Educational Policy, Apprenticeships, Labor Force Development
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Brunila, Kristiina; Ryynänen, Sanna – Journal of Education and Work, 2017
Young people labelled "disadvantaged" or "at risk of social exclusion" are increasingly directed into publicly funded or NGO-based, partly privately financed projects in order to secure their desired integration into society through work or further education. In this article, we carry out a comparative analysis of youth…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Networks, Qualitative Research, Interviews
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Lundetrae, Kjersti; Gabrielsen, Egil; Mykletun, Reidar – Journal of Education and Work, 2010
Basic skills and educational level are closely related, and both might affect employment. Data from the Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey were used to examine whether basic skills in terms of literacy and numeracy predicted youth unemployment (16-24 years) while controlling for educational level. Stepwise logistic regression showed that in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Basic Skills, Academic Achievement, Literacy
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Russell, Lisa; Simmons, Robin; Thompson, Ron – Journal of Education and Work, 2011
This paper discusses the findings from a one-year ethnographic study of young people attending Entry to Employment (E2E) programmes in two local authorities in the north of England. The paper locates E2E within the broader context of provision for low-achieving young people and of UK government policy on reducing the proportion of young people who…
Descriptors: Employment Potential, Ethnography, Foreign Countries, Public Policy
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Roberts, K. – Journal of Education and Work, 2001
In the post-Communist Eastern Europe, the scope and nature of vocational education are determined by labor demand, academic/general education is considered suitable for all ability levels, and responsibility for and financing of education has been privatized. Advantages of the new model--well-educated youth labor force and customized vocational…
Descriptors: Economic Change, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Job Training
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Smith, Erica – Journal of Education and Work, 2003
This article examines the scope for state intervention in the training and learning environment of young people in initial employment. It reports on the findings of a qualitative study of 11 teenagers entering full-time employment in New South Wales, Australia relating to the breadth and depth of the young people's learning in their jobs, and the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intervention, Adolescents, Youth Employment