Migrants, manufacturing and metropolitan labour markets in Australia
- 1 November 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Australian Geographer
- Vol. 21 (2) , 151-163
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00049189008703011
Abstract
While the experience of migrants in the Australian labour market has received considerable attention, few researchers have asked how uniform this experience has been across the country's major metropolitan labour markets. This paper shows that migrants employed in the manufacturing sector exhibit noticeable differences in their relative access to jobs in different parts of the country. This evidence raises a number of questions about the appropriate scale within which to consider the labour participation and occupational selection experience of migrant men and women.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Segmentation theory applied to local, regional and spatial labour marketsProgress in Human Geography, 1990
- Search Efficiency, Skill Transferability and Immigrant Relative Unemployment Rates in AustraliaApplied Economics, 1990
- Local employment initiatives: long‐term strategy for localities or ‘flavour of the month’?Australian Geographer, 1987
- Aspects of Occupational Mobility and Attainment among Immigrants in AustraliaPublished by JSTOR ,1987
- Migrants' Unemployment: The Determinants of Employment Success*Economic Record, 1986
- Immigrants' Work: Equality and Discrimination in the Australian Labour MarketJournal of Sociology, 1986
- Growth, Decline and Structural Change: a Study of Regional Labour Markets in Australia 1971-1981Urban Studies, 1985
- Are Immigrants and Natives Perfect Substitutes in Production?Published by JSTOR ,1985
- A Measure of the Incidence of the Costs of Structural Change: The Experience of Birth place Groups in the Australian Labour Force during the Seventies*Economic Record, 1983