Culture in the labor market: segmentation theory and perspectives of place
- 1 March 2001
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Progress in Human Geography
- Vol. 25 (1) , 37-52
- https://doi.org/10.1191/030913201672119762
Abstract
Labor market segmentation theory explains the economic marginalization of racial minorities, the working class and women. Economic geographers have contributed a perspective of spatial entrapment and spatially contingent job markets. In this article I emphasize supply-side processes and the role of these processes in labor market segmentation theory. In particular I focus on issues of cultural experience of place and cultural representation of place. I develop this argument by integrating two bodies of literature: (1) segmentation theory, in which the role of experience and representation of place remains undertheorized; and (2) cultural geography, in which such a conceptualization of place exists. The article follows a contemporary trend in human geography that links cultural with economic processes.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spatial mismatch research in the 1990s: progress and potentialPapers in Regional Science, 1999
- Home-Work Links, Labor Markets, and the Construction of Place in Lawrence, Massachusetts, 1929–1939The Professional Geographer, 1998
- The Role of Residential Location in Conditioning the Effect of Metropolitan Economic Structure on Male Youth EmploymentThe Professional Geographer, 1998
- The geography of metropolitan opportunity: A reconnaissance and conceptual frameworkHousing Policy Debate, 1995
- Effects of Applicant Overeducation, Job Status, and Job Gender Stereotype on Employment DecisionsThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1994
- THE THEORY OF CULTURAL RACISMAntipode, 1992
- The Epidemic Theory of Ghettos and Neighborhood Effects on Dropping Out and Teenage ChildbearingAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1991
- From Localised Social Structures to Localities as AgentsEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1991
- GENDER, RACE, AND COMMUTING AMONG SERVICE SECTOR WORKERS∗The Professional Geographer, 1991
- Black pioneers—do their moves to the suburbs increase economic opportunity for mothers and children?Housing Policy Debate, 1991