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All I Want Is A Job Unemployed Women Navigating The Public Workforce System Mary Gatta

  • SKU: BELL-7280424
All I Want Is A Job Unemployed Women Navigating The Public Workforce System Mary Gatta
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All I Want Is A Job Unemployed Women Navigating The Public Workforce System Mary Gatta instant download after payment.

Publisher: Stanford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.24 MB
Pages: 167
Author: Mary Gatta
ISBN: 9780804781336, 9780804790826, 9780804790857, 0804781338, 0804790825, 080479085X
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

All I Want Is A Job Unemployed Women Navigating The Public Workforce System Mary Gatta by Mary Gatta 9780804781336, 9780804790826, 9780804790857, 0804781338, 0804790825, 080479085X instant download after payment.

In All I Want Is a Job!, Mary Gatta puts a human face on workforce development policy. An ethnographic sociologist, Gatta went undercover, posing as a client in a New Jersey One-Stop Career Center. One-Stop Centers, developed as part of the federal Workforce Investment Act, are supposed to be an unemployed worker's go-to resource on the way to re-employment. But, how well do these centers function? With swarms of new clients coming through their doors, are they fit for the task of pairing America's workforce with new jobs?
Weaving together her own account with interviews of jobless women and caseworkers, Gatta offers a revealing glimpse of the toll that unemployment takes and the realities of social policy. Women—both educated and unskilled—are particularly vulnerable in the current economy. Since they are routinely paid less than their male counterparts, economic security is even harder for them to grasp. And, women are more easily tracked into available, low-wage work in sectors such as retail or food service.
Originally designed to pair job-ready workers with available openings, the current system is ill fitted for diverse clients who are seeking gainful employment. Even if One-Stops were better suited to the needs of these workers, good jobs are scarce in the wake of the Great Recession. In spite of these pitfalls, Gatta saw hope and a sense of empowerment in clients who got intensive career counseling, new jobs, and social support.
Drawing together tales from the frontlines, she highlights the promise and weaknesses of One-Stop Career Centers, recommending key shifts in workforce policy. America deserves a system that is less discriminatory, more human, and better able to assist women and their families in particular. The employed and unemployed alike would be better served by such a system—one that would meaningfully contribute to our economic recovery and future prosperity.
Mary Gatta is a Senior Scholar at Wider Opportunities for Women and an Adjunct Professor at Rutgers University . She is the author of Not Just Getting By: The New Era of Flexible Workforce Development and Juggling Food and Feelings: Emotional Balance in the Workplace.

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