Persuading employers: challenges and opportunities around an ageing workforce
Persuading employers: challenges and opportunities around an ageing workforce
Legislative drive can be key in achieving critical mass around employers’ responses to addressing disadvantage in the labour market. This can be seen in the relative lag between legislation and good practice around age (covered in the 2010 Equality Act), compared to gender (1975 Sex Discrimination Act) and ethnicity (1965 Race Relations Act). Yet as current demographic change shifts the age profile of the workforce, employers who have been slow to address age bias in workforce practice will imminently find themselves under new pressure to engage with how they can retain older workers for longer in order to continue to meet the demands of their business.
Where age has been conceptualised as problematic by employers, this paper explores how resistant employers can be persuaded of the business case for age diversity and responding to the workforce challenges of the future. We engage with the currency of perspectives around intersectionality (McBride et al., 2015; Rodriguez et al., 2016) to incorporate age, as well as leading debate on issues other than workforce demographics to change employer attitudes around age. For example, dialogue around flexible work (Richman at al., 2008; Smeaton and Ray, 2014) or intergenerational teams (Boehm et al., 2013; Kunze et al., 2011) can focus on positive outcomes such as enhanced creativity and improved performance to reinforce mutual workforce-employer benefits. We draw upon the results of our recent mixed methods research on age-friendly workplaces (Smeaton and Parry, 2018 forthcoming) in responding to these issues.
British Sociological Association
Parry, Jane
c7061194-16cb-434e-bf05-914623cfcc63
Young, Zoe
1e2183aa-f82e-4248-8af0-5fb8cda86c63
September 2018
Parry, Jane
c7061194-16cb-434e-bf05-914623cfcc63
Young, Zoe
1e2183aa-f82e-4248-8af0-5fb8cda86c63
Parry, Jane and Young, Zoe
(2018)
Persuading employers: challenges and opportunities around an ageing workforce.
In Work, Employment and Society Conference 2018: Putting Sociology to Work: Interdisciplinarity, Intersectionality and Imagination.
British Sociological Association..
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
Legislative drive can be key in achieving critical mass around employers’ responses to addressing disadvantage in the labour market. This can be seen in the relative lag between legislation and good practice around age (covered in the 2010 Equality Act), compared to gender (1975 Sex Discrimination Act) and ethnicity (1965 Race Relations Act). Yet as current demographic change shifts the age profile of the workforce, employers who have been slow to address age bias in workforce practice will imminently find themselves under new pressure to engage with how they can retain older workers for longer in order to continue to meet the demands of their business.
Where age has been conceptualised as problematic by employers, this paper explores how resistant employers can be persuaded of the business case for age diversity and responding to the workforce challenges of the future. We engage with the currency of perspectives around intersectionality (McBride et al., 2015; Rodriguez et al., 2016) to incorporate age, as well as leading debate on issues other than workforce demographics to change employer attitudes around age. For example, dialogue around flexible work (Richman at al., 2008; Smeaton and Ray, 2014) or intergenerational teams (Boehm et al., 2013; Kunze et al., 2011) can focus on positive outcomes such as enhanced creativity and improved performance to reinforce mutual workforce-employer benefits. We draw upon the results of our recent mixed methods research on age-friendly workplaces (Smeaton and Parry, 2018 forthcoming) in responding to these issues.
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Published date: September 2018
Venue - Dates:
Work, Employment & Society Conference 2018: Putting Sociology to Work: Interdisciplinarity, Intersectionality and Imagination, Europe Hotel, Belfast, United Kingdom, 2018-09-12 - 2018-09-14
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Local EPrints ID: 437070
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/437070
PURE UUID: 40f40a09-9737-4bbe-8443-a240705d2049
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Date deposited: 16 Jan 2020 17:32
Last modified: 13 Dec 2021 03:04
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Contributors
Author:
Zoe Young
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