Youth, Transitions and Social Exclusion: Some Issues for Youth Research in the UK
- 1 June 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Youth Studies
- Vol. 1 (2) , 163-176
- https://doi.org/10.1080/13676261.1998.10593004
Abstract
Studies of the economic restructuring of the UK suggest that the future labour market will be typified by increasing proportions of workers unemployed or subemployed in casual, informal, peripheral, non-standard jobs. Clearly the future working lives of many young people will be substantially different from those of their parents' generation, as full employment in regular, relatively permanent jobs gives way to more insecure and risky working lives. Some of the social problems that have accompanied the fracturing of previous youth transitions are reviewed and the idea that such problems are indicative of the emergence of a deviant, anti-social, anti-work underclass introduced. The focus is upon Teesside in north-east England, a locality which reveals these broad social and economic transformations in the most dramatic way. In conclusion, four themes which might inform future research on marginal youth transitions and social exclusion in the UK are outlined.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Welfare Dependency, the Enterprise Culture and Self-Employed SurvivalWork, Employment & Society, 1996
- Labours of Love: Voluntary Working in a Depressed Local EconomyJournal of Social Policy, 1996
- Anelpis: A preliminary expedition into a world without hope or potentialParallax, 1995
- Fiddly Jobs, Undeclared Working and the Something for Nothing SocietyWork, Employment & Society, 1994
- Shut up and dance: Youth culture and changing modes of femininityCultural Studies, 1993
- Employment Histories and the Concept of the UnderclassSociology, 1992
- Deconstructing the Underclass The Term's Dangers as a Planning ConceptJournal of the American Planning Association, 1990
- Workforce Restructuring, Social Insurance Coverage and the Black EconomyJournal of Social Policy, 1989
- Labour-Market Changes and New Forms of Work in Old Industrial Regions: Maybe Flexibility for Some but Not Flexible AccumulationEnvironment and Planning D: Society and Space, 1989
- In Pursuit of the UnderclassJournal of Social Policy, 1987