[go: up one dir, main page]

Spence et al., 2016 - Google Patents

Tracking habitus across a transnational professional field

Spence et al., 2016

View HTML
Document ID
881145284634677494
Author
Spence C
Carter C
Belal A
Husillos J
Dambrin C
Archel P
Publication year
Publication venue
Work, employment and society

External Links

Snippet

The sociology of the professions has shied away from cross-national comparative work. Yet research in different professional jurisdictions emphasizes the transnational nature of professional fields. Further work is therefore needed that explores the extent to which …
Continue reading at journals.sagepub.com (HTML) (other versions)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
Spence et al. Tracking habitus across a transnational professional field
Anwar et al. Between a rock and a hard place: Freedom, flexibility, precarity and vulnerability in the gig economy in Africa
Lehdonvirta et al. The global platform economy: A new offshoring institution enabling emerging-economy microproviders
Örnebring Clientelism, elites, and the media in Central and Eastern Europe
Henry et al. Richness in diversity: Towards more contemporary research conceptualisations of women’s entrepreneurship
O’Mahoney et al. Power and the diffusion of management ideas: The case of McKinsey & Co
Koutsimpogiorgos et al. Platform adaptation to regulation: The case of domestic cleaning in Europe
Spence et al. Global ends, local means: Cross-national homogeneity in professional service firms
Flore et al. Creative arts workers during the Covid-19 pandemic: Social imaginaries in lockdown
Tschirhart et al. Advancing scholarship on membership associations: New research and next steps
Cornforth et al. Evolution in board chair–CEO relationships: A negotiated order perspective
Martin “There Is Abuse Everywhere” Migrant Nonprofit Organizations and the Problem of Precarious Work
Brass Do service provision NGOs perform civil society functions? Evidence of NGOs’ relationship with democratic participation
Lam Chinese adaptations: African agency, fragmented community and social capital creation in Ghana
Suykens et al. Examining the extent and coherence of nonprofit hybridization toward the market in a post-corporatist welfare state
Aguado et al. A new role for the firm incorporating sustainability and human dignity. Conceptualization and measurement
Allan et al. The fearful and anxious professional: Partner experiences of working in the financialized professional services firm
Hwang From prison to entrepreneurship: can entrepreneurship be a reentry strategy for justice-impacted individuals?
Randma-Liiv et al. From network to hierarchy: The evolution of the Estonian senior civil service development system
Hujo A global social contract: New steps towards a rights-based approach to migration governance?
Sheaff Constructing accounts of organisational failure: Policy, power and concealment
Davies et al. Poor people’s participation: neoliberal institutions or left turn?
Zhang Asymmetric mutual dependence between the state and capitalists in China
Abdullah et al. Clientelism: Factionalism in the allocation of public resources in Iraq after 2003
Cobbinah The oddity of desiring informality