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Scarring effects for young people in challenging economic times: a conceptual synthesis and future policy and research agenda

Scarring effects for young people in challenging economic times: a conceptual synthesis and future policy and research agenda
Scarring effects for young people in challenging economic times: a conceptual synthesis and future policy and research agenda

A renewed conceptual framework of labour market scarring is developed. Due to economic shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic, labour market scarring presents an important policy problem. The paper first outlines the theoretical mainstream view on scarring and argues that existing theoretical frame works on labour market scarring are not sufficient to understand the post-COVID labour market for graduates. We identify three areas in which mainstream understanding overlooks and discusses their explanatory value in understanding contextual mediatory factors and non-economic effects of initial scarring. A case is made for qualitative research and career development approaches to understand the processes of scarring as these provide further insight into its socio-psychological manifestations and consequences.

Graduates, disruptions, economic shocks, labour market, scarring
308-325
Tomlinson, Michael
9dd1cbf0-d3b0-421e-8ded-b3949ebcee18
Tholen, Gerbrand
2746c654-16f2-41d4-a3b1-7080c253c6a5
Tomlinson, Michael
9dd1cbf0-d3b0-421e-8ded-b3949ebcee18
Tholen, Gerbrand
2746c654-16f2-41d4-a3b1-7080c253c6a5

Tomlinson, Michael and Tholen, Gerbrand (2023) Scarring effects for young people in challenging economic times: a conceptual synthesis and future policy and research agenda. Labour & Industry: a Journal of the Social and Economic Relations of Work, 33 (3), 308-325. (doi:10.1080/10301763.2023.2251216).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A renewed conceptual framework of labour market scarring is developed. Due to economic shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic, labour market scarring presents an important policy problem. The paper first outlines the theoretical mainstream view on scarring and argues that existing theoretical frame works on labour market scarring are not sufficient to understand the post-COVID labour market for graduates. We identify three areas in which mainstream understanding overlooks and discusses their explanatory value in understanding contextual mediatory factors and non-economic effects of initial scarring. A case is made for qualitative research and career development approaches to understand the processes of scarring as these provide further insight into its socio-psychological manifestations and consequences.

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Accepted/In Press date: 21 August 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 August 2023
Published date: 28 August 2023
Keywords: Graduates, disruptions, economic shocks, labour market, scarring

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 481833
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481833
PURE UUID: 0d75360b-6571-42ac-855c-0c56193c280f
ORCID for Michael Tomlinson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1057-5188

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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2023 16:35
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:20

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Contributors

Author: Gerbrand Tholen

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