Buscar por | |  
 
Listado de libros ordenados por novedad
Listado de libros ordenados por título
Colección Histórica
Biblioteca CLACSO-UNL
 
Biblioteca CLACSO-IIGG
 
Biblioteca CLACSO-EDUVIM
 
Biblioteca CLACSO-UNGS
 
Las Juventudes Argentinas Hoy
 
Biblioteca Centros CLACSO Brasil
 
Biblioteca CLACSO-Universidad de San Marcos
 
Biblioteca CLACSO-UARTES
 
Biblioteca CLACSO-IPES
 
Biblioteca Ayacucho
 
Pensar la Pandemia
 
Brigada - Para leer en libertad
 
Casa de las Américas
 
Biblioteca UNIPE
 
 
 
 
 
 
Antologías
 
 
Crítica y Emancipación
 
Revista latinoamericana de investigacion critica
 
Cuadernos del Pensamiento Crítico
 
Policy Brief
 
Revista OSAL
 
 
Como comprar
Gastos de envío
Privacidad
Biblioteca Virtual CLACSO
www.clacso.org
 
 
   
 
Volver
Do race and nationality matter in getting a job?

Field experiment and survey of employment discrimination in China

Oluwasola Emmanuel Omoju. [Autor]


....................................................................................
Sur-Sur.
ISBN 978-987-722-303-3
CLACSO. CODESRIA. IDEAs.
Buenos Aires.
Diciembre de 2017

*Disponible sólo en versión digital


Globalisation has brought people closer. The world, however, is divided into distinct categories that are marked through global racial and ethnic taxonomy (Desmond and Emirbayer, 2009). In the struggle to survive, discrimination along racial and nationality lines in the job market, have continued to influence who gets what, when and how. While a few studies (e.g. Wilson et al, 2006) have examined the determinants of racial disparities in developed countries such as the United States, the emergence of China in the global economic order and the influx of migrants to the country, whose demographic structure suggests an elastic supply of workforce, gives concern on the prospects of employment for migrants from developing and developed countries alike. Findings from earlier studies (e.g. Wilson, 1997; Royster, 2003) have shown that the difficulty of migrants to get jobs in developed countries, for instance African Americans relative to White Americans, is due to lack of relevant skills and experience needed for success. Such studies, however, do not say if experience and skills would still matter if the same level of skills and experience were to be found on the CV of a set of workers with different nationality and race. Who would get called for interview and who would not?
 
     
     
 
  Volver        
Descargar .pdf
 
   
 
 
   
   
 
www.clacso.org