Academic Year:
2021/22
3391 - Bachelor's degree in Political and Administration Sciences
21689 - Employment Policies and Labour Market
Teaching Plan Information
Academic Course:
2021/22
Academic Center:
339 - Faculty of Political and Social Sciences
Study:
3391 - Bachelor's degree in Political and Administration Sciences
Subject:
21689 - Employment Policies and Labour Market
Ambit:
---
Credits:
4.0
Course:
4 and 3
Teaching languages:
Teachers:
Luis Maria Ortiz Gervasi
Teaching Period:
Second quarter
Schedule:
Presentation
The general objectives of the course are: (a) to acquire a good knowledge of recent developments of labour markets in OECD countries and the main problems these labour markets are currently facing; (b) to make a comparative analysis of different policies designed to cope with these problems; and (c) to address the situation of groups that suffer from a weak position in the labour market (i.e. women and ethnic minorities). The course is also aimed at making the student familiar with concepts and indicators generally used to assess labour market and employment policies.
The transition from Fordism to Post-Fordism (and from Industrial to Post-Industrial societies) has generally entailed a dilemma between unemployment and inequality. For many societies, such a dilemma has turned unemployment into a constant, chronic policy-making challenge. After historically revising the evolution of labour markets in Europe and the national institutions shaping the entry into the labour market, the course will explore the determinants and levels of unemployment in comparative perspective; it will analyse different policies carried out to cope with unemployment and the results these policies have had. Although the gender dimension of labour market institutions and policies will be dealt with all throughout the course, a specific session specifically dealing with gender labour market inequalities at the very end of the course.
Associated skills
This course is part of the optional courses itinerary “social analysis” that, altogether, develops the following competencies:
BASIC SKILLS:
CB2. That students can apply their knowledge to their job or vocation in a professional manner and have competences typically demonstrated through devising and sustaining arguments and solving problems within their field of study.
CB3. That students have the ability to gather and interpret relevant data (usually within their field of study) to inform judgments that include reflection on relevant social, scientific or ethical.
CB5. That students have developed those skills needed to undertake further studies with a high degree of autonomy.
GENERAL SKILLS:
CG1. Capacity for analysis and synthesis.
CG3. Knowledge of a second language.
CG4. Basic computer skills.
CG10. Research skills.
TRANSVERSAL SKILLS:
CT1. Identify and analyze critically gender inequality and its intersection with other axes of inequality.
SPECIFIC SKILLS:
CE3. Examine the structure and functioning of political institutions.
EC4. Examine the fundamentals of comparative politics.
CE9. Interpret the historical dimension of political and social processes.
CE10. Analyze the structure, organization and functioning of public administrations at various levels.
CE11. Analyze the planning and administration of management.
CE13. Interpret the economic environment and the economic dimension of the public sector.
CE14. Contrast the capacity for planning, implementation, evaluation and analysis of public policies.
CE18. Analyze quantitative and qualitative data.
Sustainable Development Goals
ODS 1: No poverty
ODS 3: Good health and well-being
ODS 4: Quality education
ODS 5: Gender equality
ODS 8: Decent work and economic growth
ODS 10: Reduced inequalities
Contents
General introduction
Week 1. Historical introduction: from Industrial to Post-Industrial Societies: dilemmas of current labour markets
Week 2. Occupational change: Technological change and new skills in the global economy
Globalisation and unemployment
Week 3. Immigration, international trade, offshoring and financial globalisation
Week 4. Covid-19 pandemics and its effect on employment
National institutions
Week 5. Collective bargaining
Week 6. Systems of education and transition from school to work
Policies
Week 7. Labour market regulation: flexibility atypical employment and labour market segmentation
Week 8. Passive labour market policies
Week 9. Active labour market policies
Week 10. Minimum wage and start-ups
Analysis of gender labour market inequalities
Week 11. Gender gaps in employment, atypical employment and earnings in cross-national perspective; structural, economic and institutional causes gender labour market segregation.
Teaching Methods
The course is structured in lectures, on the one hand, and seminars and activities to be held online, on the other hand. Each week will be devoted to a topic. In some cases, the lecturer’s presentation on the topic will be accompanied by a question for discussion, related to the session’s topic. Readings will be made available beforehand, through Aula Global. An adequate gender balance in the authorship and content of the readings will be considered. Students are encouraged to arrive to the session having already read these readings, having prepared a provisional answer to the topic and ready to actively engage in the subsequent discussion. This (see above) will be part of the assessment of their performance along the course.
Along with lectures and seminars, the students are expected to make a brief research on the level and characteristics of unemployment in a country of their choice or, alternatively, on a topic of a list that will be provided by the lecturer. Students are expected to rely on any of the statistical sources mentioned above.
The learning environment of the ‘Employment Policies and Labour Market’ course is free of any sexist, homophobic or transphobic behaviour, and, in general, of a discriminatory behaviour of any kind. As a lecturer of the course, I will appreciate that such a principle is applied to the language used in the classroom of the web of the course.
Evaluation
Final marks will be provided on a 0 to 10 scale.
- 65% of the mark will be based on students’ performances in a final exam, based on the material for the lectures (PPT presentations) and basic readings (see below).
- 20% of the mark will be based on students’ attendance, participation in class and, in particular, participation in the seminars and activities to be held in online sessions along the course.
- 15% of the mark will be based on an essay. It may be either a comparison between the unemployment levels and policies of two selected countries; or the answer to a specific research topic, among the ones proposed by the lecturer of the course. The indiscriminate and literal copy of any source (academic or otherwise) would entail the immediate fail of the essay and the course
Retake exams and procedure
Students who have failed the first exam will be entitled to a second opportunity (retake exam) provided that: a) they have attended satisfactorily more than half of the seminars and b) have submitted the written research mentioned above. The retake exam will take place between the fourth and fifth week of the third term, in a period established for this purpose by the university in the academic calendar.
Bibliography and information resources
The following basic readings are compulsory for the exam.
5.1. Basic references
- Blau, Francine D.; Ferber, Marianne A., Winkler, Anne (1998). The Economics of Women, Men and Work, Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
- Esping-Andersen, Gösta Social Foundations of Postindustrial Economies. Oxford University Press. Chapter 6 (pp. 99-119).
- Gornick, Janet. C.; Meyers, Marcia K.; Ross, Katherin E. (1997). Supporting the employment of mothers: Policy variation across fourteen welfare states. Journal of European social policy, 7(1), 45-70.
- Kogan, Irena (2006). Labor markets and economic incorporation among recent immigrants in Europe. Social Forces, 85(2), 697-721.
- Lindbeck, A. & Snower, D.J. (2001) “Insiders versus Outsiders”, The Journal of Economic Perspectives, 15(1): 165-188
- Mazzucato, Mariana (2018). The value of everything: Making and taking in the global economy. Hachette UK.
- Polavieja, Javier (2005) “Flexibility or polarization? Temporary employment and job tasks in Spain”, Socio-Economic Review 3(2): 233-258
5.2. Other resources
The didactic resources for the course are, on the one hand, the readings to be discussed in each of the seminars held along the course. These readings will be made available to the students on-line. On the other hand, students are expected to use the following statistical databases to gather empirical evidence for the written research (essay) mentioned above:
- OECD stats: http://stats.oecd.org/Index.aspx
- ILO : http://laborsta.ilo.org/
- EUROSTAT : http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/statistics/themes
- EURYDICE: http://eacea.ec.europa.eu/education/eurydice/eurybase_en.php
- EIRO: http://www.eurofound.europa.eu/eiro/
-IFO Center for Labor and Demographic Economics: https://www.ifo.de/en/research/ifo-center-for-labor-and-demographic-economicsç
Specific databases for the analysis of gender labour market inequality
- European Institute of Gender Equality: https://eige.europa.eu/
- Gender Equality (European Foundation for the Improvement of Working and Living Conditions): https://www.eurofound.europa.eu/topic/gender-equality
- OECD Family Database: https://www.oecd.org/els/family/database.htm
- Comparative Family Policy Database (Max-Planck-Institute for Demographic Research): https://www.demogr.mpg.de/cgi-bin/databases/FamPolDB/index.plx
- Family Policy Database (Janet Gornick et al.): https://splash-db.eu/dataresource/the-family-policy-database-version-2-2003/
These databases are expected to provide students with evidence on the levels of unemployment in the country they have selected for their research, the policies designed to cope with it and the incidence of unemployment among the groups (women, ethnic minorities) more vulnerable to unemployment.