Understanding brain waste: Unequal opportunities for skills development between highly skilled women and men, migrants and nonmigrants
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-03-12 收录
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https://zenodo.org/records/5035435
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资源简介:
Brain waste studies seldom analyse the skills development of tertiary-educated
workers according to gender and country of origin. Combining statistical analyses,
participatory workshops and 77 qualitative interviews on employment trajectories
with highly skilled workers in Switzerland, I offer three contributions. An
intersectional perspective reveals unequal opportunities of skills development:
Swiss-born men have the highest rates of employment, income and jobs commensurate
with their education, followed by foreign-born men, then Swiss-born women
and lastly foreign-born women. Second, a multiscalar perspective shows how actions
by individuals, families, employers and the state favour or constrain skills advancement
among women and men. Individual perceptions of gender roles and unequal
childcare responsibilities within couples constrain women's skills development. Further
constraints are set by the state and employers' policies and practices regarding
migration, childcare, taxation and hiring. Third, a spatial–temporal perspective unveils
that gender inequalities arise at particular moments (migration and childbirth) and
places (lacking childcare services and limited employment).
创建时间:
2021-06-28



