|
Altimir, O.; Beccaria, L. El
mercado de trabajo bajo el nuevo régimen económico
en Argentina. (The labour market under the new economic regime
in Argentina). Santiago, Chile: ECLAC, 1999. (Economic reforms,
28)
This document analyses the effects of the process of stabilisation
and structural reform undergone during the nineties regarding the
behaviour of employment and salaries in Argentina.
The labour market, which suffered adjustments inside its institutional
framework in accordance with those made in other areas, did not
follow the country's success in terms of stability and growth.
The little impact of production expansion on employment observed
between 1991 and 1995 contributed to increase unemployment, which
reached overwhelming proportions in the country.
The study highlights the fact that the slow evolution of formal
employment neither resulted in a balanced growth of the informal
sector nor had effects on open unemployment, which is a striking
characteristic of the period.
Carpio, J.; Klein, E.; Novacovsky I. (Comp.)
Informalidad y exclusión social. (Informality and social
exclusion). Buenos Aires: ILO, Fondo de Cultura Económica,
2000. 336 p. ill.
The articles contained in this book are the result of the Research
Programme developed within the framework of the Forum on Informality
and Social Exclusion organised by the System of Information, Assessment
and Monitoring of Social Programmes (SIEMPRO), which depends from
the Secretary of Social Development, the Sub Secretary of Social
Projects of Buenos Aires in collaboration with the International
Labour Organisation between 1997 and 1998.
CEM. Caracterización
del trabajo a Domicilio y Mujeres. (Portrayal of home work and
women). Santiago, Chile: SENCE, 2003. Prepared by CEM for SENCE.
The purpose of this study is to establish a social demographic
and labour profile and to become familiar with the motivations,
problems, satisfactions and training needs of female home-based
workers in Chile and suggest recommendations to guide training policies
rooted in the reality of this group of women.
Chong, A.; Gradstein, M. Inequality
Institutions and Informality. Washington: IADB, 2004.
This paper presents theory and evidence on the determinants of
the size of the informal sector. It proposes a simple theoretical
model in which the informal sector's size is negatively related
to institutional quality and positively related to income inequality.
Cimoli, M.; Primi, A.; Pugno, M. Un
modelo de bajo crecimiento: la informalidad como restricción
estructural. (A model of small growth: informality as a structural
restriction). ECLAC Magazine. Santiago, Chile, n. 88, Apr. 2006,
p. 89-107.
This paper takes a non-traditional perspective, i.e. it concentrates
on the presence of an informal sector considered as a structural
barrier to sustainable growth. Therefore, the coexistence of the
formal and informal sector appears as a peculiar way of structural
heterogeneity that hinders development in the region. It clarifies
the concept of informality and its main streams which differ from
each other in terms of definitions and policy proposals. It informs
about the dynamics of the product, productivity and employment and
its growth in a dual economy.
Córdoba, M.; Gottret, M. V.; López y Asociados,
T.; Montes, Á.; Ortega, L.; Perry, S. Innovación
participativa: experiencias con pequeños productores agrícolas
en seis países de América Latina. (Participating
innovation: experiences with small rural producers in six Latin
American countries). Santiago, Chile: ECLAC, 2004. (Productive
Development, 159).
The document contains case studies on participation research
experiences with rural producers. Its objective was to review
some relevant experiences of technological innovation with small
producers of Latin America, highlight the importance of this subject
to rural development and suggest elements of governmental policy/strategy
and instruments to promote them, focusing on eventual specific
approaches that ensure gender equity.
Five different experiences carried out in Bolivia, Cuba, Colombia,
Nicaragua and indigenous communities in Mexico with varied plantations
(potato, yucca, beans, corn, banana and wood products).
The participating research has the advantage of actively incorporating
farmers in the definition, prioritisation and solution of problems,
bringing together both their knowledge about the complex productive
systems and other political or social systems in which they act.
The above adds to the research since while they are trained in
new production techniques, thus improving their competitiveness,
they build formal and informal links among them, which brings
along a better quality of life for them.
Di Martino, V.; Filippi, S.; Loiselle, C. Company
cases and cross-company initiatives. Working conditions improvement
in Haiti. Geneva: ILO, 2003.
This document describes a project that is being implemented in
Haiti to improve the working conditions in the garment assembly
sector. Allegations of sub-standard working conditions have been
dissuading potential foreign investors from doing business in
Haiti.
The project is structured around the technical assistance and
training of ILO's "WISE" (Work Improvements in Small
Enterprises) approach, which provides simple, low-cost and practical
ideas for improvement of working conditions that can help businesses
to improve their productivity at the same time. The project was
implemented through the Haitian employers' organisation ADIH.
The document highlights the lessons learned and the good practices
regarding the improvements in working conditions, particularly
regarding safety, noise reduction and workers' welfare.
Durston, J. Capacitación
microempresarial de jóvenes rurales indígenas en
Chile. Lecciones CTI del programa 'Chile Joven' (SENCE/ INDAP)
en dos comunidades mapuches. (Micro entrepreneurial training
for indigenous rural youth in Chile. CTI lessons from the "Chile
joven" programme (SENCE/INDAP) in two mapuche communities).
Santiago, Chile: ECLAC, 2001. (Social Policies, 49)
This study focuses on the institutional and contextual aspects
of rural youth training in Chile. It deals with the issues of
institutional learning related to the participation of training
programmes in the rural area and the problems of the youth association
microenterprise, regarding issues related to public administration
and the externalisation of training services to the market.
The analysis focuses on the "Freelance Work Training"
(CTI) Programme, the "Chile joven" programme of the
National Training and Employment Service (SENCE) of the Ministry
of Labour.
The case study of this paper was carried out in two mapuche indigenous
communities of the south of Chile. The special features of training
young people from this indigenous people are part of the main
three concerns of this report, together with the learning related
to the externalisation of the labour market and the particular
challenges of youth training for microenterprise management.
ECLAC. Centroamérica:
Cambio institucional y desarrollo organizativo de las pequeñas
unidades de producción rural. (Central America: institutional
change and organisational development of small rural productive
units). Mexico: ECLAC, 1999.
The range of experiences gathered in this document exposes a
variety of associative figures created to fulfil the specific
objectives of economic and social development of its members.
It refers to small rural producers, most of them farmers who produce
some surplus in the market. In less proportion it refers to farmers
whose production is less than expected for their subsistence.
A smaller proportion are medium-sized producers. The most common
figure is the cooperative, and then we find associations and association
networks. They seek to find solutions to the basic social demands
of their members.
In a big effort to offer employment and income options to farmer
families, each organisation or association has developed its share
capital by entering labour areas that have been restricted or
broadened according to their possibilities but most of the times
they receive support from diverse sources.
The organisations studied have opted for productive transformation
and their agribusiness integration. To do so they have developed
mechanisms of alternative financing, projects of community trade,
offer of assistance and technical training services, as well as
rural initiatives of local development. In each of them the factors
that favoured their success are pointed out together with their
difficulties and the challenges they face.
ECLAC. CELADE. Adolescencia
y juventud en América Latina y el Caribe: problemas, oportunidades
y desafíos en el comienzo de un nuevo siglo. (Adolescence
and youth in Latin America and the Caribbean: problems, opportunities
and challenges in the beginning of a new century). Santiago, Chile:
ECLAC, 2000. (Population and Development, 9)
This document deals with adolescent and youth issues in three key
aspects to be put to the consideration of the Heads of State and
Government. It first analyses how adolescents grow and mature, showing
the problems, opportunities and challenges they are faced with today.
Then, it mentions an integrated group of sectoral public policies
concerned with education, health and labour and social insertion.
It particularly studies how quality in education segments youth
participation in the labour market, being most of them employed
by micro and small enterprises and lacking social security protection.
This is why these ventures are given so much importance; they are
a way to improve labour insertion and life quality of young people.
On account of the above, the document makes articulated proposals
focused on the strategic and managerial field, with the aim of largely
improving the effectiveness, efficiency and relevance of the actions
taken, particularly in terms of education and training. Therefore,
the idea is to strongly promote the incorporation of a real generational
perspective into public policies, with the aim of improving the
quality of life children, adolescents and young people.
Fawcett, C. Latin
American youth in transition: a policy paper on youth unemployment
in Latin America and the Caribbean. Washington: IADB, 2002.
This policy analysis focuses on the school-to-work transition as
providing the central context in understanding youth unemployment
in Latin America.
Youth unemployment is not a transitory state to employment, rather
it is a very lengthy process where youth move from unemployment,
schooling, unpaid unemployment, and low-wage unskilled employment
- all of which have low opportunity costs.
The youth transition process, including that of youth unemployment,
clearly reflects that of larger labour market trends - the considerable
informality of the labour market, the growing skills-wage gap between
workers in the formal-informal sector; and falling incomes of informal
workers, moving precariously toward the income poverty line.
The document tries to examine how the policy on structural adjustment
applied during the last decade, the economic growth, the specific
plans and programmes on employment and youth have had impacts on
this transition. Finally, some possible action policies are outlined
to overturn this situation.
Ferej, K. The
Integration of Youth into the Informal Sector: The Kenyan Experience.
Kenya: Moi University. Round Table on The integration of youth into
working life, Second International Vocational and Technical Education
Congress, UNEVOC. Seoul, Korea. April 26 to 30 1999.
This paper discusses the transition of young people to work, particularly
into the informal sector of the economy in Kenya. The informal sector
in Kenya is now responsible for absorbing the larger proportion
of new entrants into the job market. To understand this process
this paper examines the development of the informal sector in Kenya
and recent trends in its evolvement; entry into the informal sector
and the characteristics of young people entering the sector; the
training process in the sector; and the implications for education
and training.
Freije, S. Informal
Employment in Latin America and the Caribbean: Causes, Consequences
and Policy Recommendations. IADB, 2001.
Freije, S.; Monteferrante, P. Common
problems of back door neighbors: Social security and Informal Employment
in Barbados, Trinidad/Tobago and Venezuela. IADB, 2002.
The study has two objectives: to evaluate the degree of poverty
and lack of social protection of informal workers in three countries
of the region: Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela; and
to recommend mechanisms for broadening social security and assistance
coverage of informal workers in the selected countries. To do so,
a description and assessment is made with regards to the social
security system of the three countries. The dynamics of labour markets
are analysed together with the relationship between informal employment,
poverty and social protection. Finally, a diagnosis on social protection
for informal workers is made and some recommendations on social
protection are given.
Frigotto, G. Globalização
e Crise do Emprego: Mistificações e Perspectivas da
Formação Técnico-Profissional. Boletím
Técnico do Senac. Rio de Janeiro, SENAC. v.25, n. 2, 1999.
In this article the author reflects upon the changes occurred in
world economy, the effects of this stage of globalisation on the
labour market of underdeveloped economies and the impact on the
life standards of people. He analyses the Brazilian educational
system: middle and basic education and vocational training.
It particularly studies how the changes in the integrated System
S have accompanied the changes in the labour market. It analyses
whether the training provided adapts to new labour forms (and to
what extent), the new precariousness and instability of employment
and the increasing informality and unemployment.
García, N.E. Growth,
competitiveness and employment in Peru, 1990-2003. CEPAL Review
Nº 83, 2004.
The growth of high-quality employment needed to reduce the share
of informal occupation and open unemployment in Peru will require
an acceleration and diversification of private investment in the
tradable sector. One of the main constraints faced is the uncompetitiveness
of the non-extractive tradable sector. In 1990-2003, competitiveness
improved in this sector essentially as a result of lower labour
costs, a socially unjust and economically ineffective route to follow.
To raise competitiveness, it is essential for the macroeconomic
regime to include a competitive real exchange rate (to which there
are obstacles) and higher productivity at the microeconomic level.
This latter goal needs to be pursued through microeconomic and mesoeconomic
policies, the main obstacle being the narrow outlook prevailing
from the mid 1990s onward, which emphasized the reduction of average
labour costs as the main way to raise competitiveness.
García, A.; Mertens, L.; Wilde, R. Procesos
de subcontratación y cambios en la calificación de
los trabajadores: estudios de caso en México. (Outsourcing
processes and changes in workers' qualifications: case studies in
Mexico). Santiago, Chile: ECLAC, 1999. 77p. ill. (Productive Development,
54)
This document studies the relationships between large and small
enterprises with case studies conducted in four sectors. It particularly
analyses the reasons why large enterprises use outsourcing to hire
micro and small enterprises and how the latter keep their profit
margins, largely due to the reduction in labour costs by employing
informal workers. Four case studies are presented which reflect
different modalities that are configured and tend to change with
the impacts of the crisis, opening and modernisation of the sectors
covered by these enterprises.
This allows to understand the trends in work conditions, job quality,
salaries and staff training modalities of different types of enterprises,
in addition to the training instruments encouraged by them.
ICFTU.
The informal economy: women in the frontline. Trade Union World
Briefing, 2.
While women are many times discriminated and edged out of the labour
world, they are strongly represented in the informal economy and,
trade unions of women in the informal economy have been emphasized.
Home-based textile workers in Argelia, Brazil and the United States,
street vendors in India and Moldavia, free-lance hairdressers in
Ghana, peasant farmers in Peru, home-based child carers in Croatia;
fishmongers in Chad
all have their tale to tell as trade unionists.
The fundamental trade union principle of solidarity is at stake,
but so is the very survival of the trade union movement worldwide.
Invernizzi, N. Empregos
Precários no Setor Terciário: estudo de trajetórias
ocupacionais de trabalhadores em risco de exclusão. Boletím
Técnico do Senac. Rio de Janeiro, SENAC. v.25, n. 28, 2002.
This paper gives an account of a research conducted in Brazil which
studied the various forms of employment in a reduced group of people.
The analysis concludes that poor schooling and vocational training
in the workers interviewed are key elements of the employment problem
they suffer.
It shows how the occupational paths of the interviewed workers are
marked by an early entrance in the labour market, short-term employment
relationships and occupations, high levels of informality, particularly
among women, frequent unemployment, low performance and low qualification
required by the activities done.
All these indicators show how workers who have a low educational
level and little or non-existing vocational training usually have
the least favoured jobs in formal employment, or informal occupations,
while they still are mostly affected by unemployment.
Jacquier, C. Social
protection in agriculture. Geneva: ILO. Labour Education: n.
131-132, abr.-set. , 2003. p. 35-40.
This document gives an account of the vulnerability of rural workers
in developing countries. It emphasizes the little access they have
to social security and their precarious living and working conditions.
The fact that most of these workers are freelance means that they
are usually unable to afford social security.
Finally, the document presents a number of proposals made by the
local community and the ILO to counteract this vulnerability.
Kosacoff, B. (Coord) Evaluación
de un escenario posible y deseable de reestructuración y
fortalecimiento del Complejo Textil argentino. (An assessment
on the possible and desirable scenario of a restructured and enhanced
Argentinean textile industry). Buenos Aires: ECLAC, 2004.
This document analyses the evolution of the Argentinean textile
sector from the nineties to the present. It particularly focuses
on the impacts of the convertibility plan of the nineties and the
changes in trade policy concerning the organisational evolution
of this sector and the performance of the enterprises that belong
to it (in terms of its dynamism in productivity, products, employment,
investment and exports).
The nineties brought further organisational flexibility for enterprises.
But it also brought about a major increase in informal employment
and informal productive units, which are the consequences of the
adjustments made by this sector in response to the changes in the
context.
Finally, possible policies are discussed which intend to improve
the sector's competitiveness and bring some formality to informal
productive units and workers through training, tax and credit policies.
Lam, J. C. Perú:
el Estado como promotor de la inversión y el empleo.
(Peru: the State as a promoter of investment and employment). Santiago,
Chile: ILPES, 2002. (Public management, 19)
This paper takes the importance of employment and investment as
the starting point of economic growth.
It presents the evolution, achievements and difficulties of the
State's action between 1996-2000 in the promotion of productive
employment and education for work. It also presents the actions
taken by the entrepreneurial sector and private investment, small
and microenterprises, together with their role in the demand to
fulfil their functions, which calls for the application of the efficiency
and priority criteria.
Llamas Huitron, I. Informalidad
en América Latina: educación y grupos sociales más
vulnerables. (Informality in Latin America: education and most
vulnerable social groups). In: López N.; Pereyra, A. (Coord.)
Educación y mercado de trabajo urbano. (Education and urban
labour market). Buenos Aires: UNESCO.IIPE, 2005. p. 12-33. (Debate,
2) p.11
Loayza, N. V.; Oviedo, A. M.; Servén, L. The
impact of regulation on growth and informality. Cross-Country evidence.
Washington: World Bank, 2005.
This paper studies the effects of regulation on economic growth
and the relative size of the informal sector in a large sample of
industrial and developing countries. Along with firm dynamics, informality
is an important channel through which regulation affects macroeconomic
performance and economic growth in particular. The paper concludes
that a heavier regulatory burden - particularly in product and labour
markets - reduces growth and induces informality. These effects
are, however, mitigated as the overall institutional framework improves.
Loayza, N. The
economics of the informal sector: A Simple Model and Some Empirical
Evidence from Latin America. Washington: World Bank, 1997. (Policy
research working paper, 1727).
This study started from the view that informal economies arise
when governments impose excessive taxes and regulations that they
are unable to enforce. The research studied the determinants and
effects of the informal sector in an endogenous growth model whose
production technology depends essentially on congestable public
services. The model concluded that changes--in both policy parameters
and the quality of government institutions--that promote an increase
in the relative size of the informal economy will also generate
a reduction in the rate of economic growth.
Using data from Latin American countries, it concludes that the
size of the informal economy will depend positively on proxies for
tax burden and labour market restrictions and negatively on the
quality of government institutions, which has a negative impact
on the economic growth of countries.
Mejía Flores, R. Conferencia:
Mujer y Trabajo Informal en México. (Conference: Women
and Informal Labour in Mexico). Mexico: Secretary of Economic Development.
Social Development Fund; ENEP Acatlán, UNAM, 2003.
Montero, C. La
formación de capital humano en empleos atípicos: el
caso del trabajo a domicilio. (Training human resources for
non-typical jobs: the case of home work). Santiago, Chile: ECLAC,
2000.
The increase in the amount of people taking up atypical jobs and
the State's withdrawal from training for work have raised the question
of how the workforce of such jobs gets training.
On the basis of the available statistics, a typology was elaborated
with the cases corresponding to the different types of jobs observed
in Chile. In-depth interviews were conducted in each case.
The material gathered allows to put forward the hypotheses of human
resources training mechanisms. It also allows to identify the deficiencies
of the role of enterprises and the State in terms of training financing
and competency acquisition.
Moraes, Eunice Léa de. Relação
gênero e raça na política pública de
qualificação social e profissional. Brasilia:
MTE, SPPE. DEQ, 2005. 39 p. - Construindo identidades sociais;
v. 1. Coleção Qualificação Social
e Profissional.
This article intends to address the relationship between gender
and race in vocational training from the basis of the new National
Qualification Plan. The categories of gender and race begin to
have a different role in public policy for the present government.
In 2003, the government created two important secretaries: the
Secretaria Especial de Políticas de Promoção
da Igualdade Racial (SEPPIR) and the Secretaria de Promoção
da Mulher, thus addressing the historical claims of women's and
black people's movements for the sustainable promotion of race
and gender equity.
MTEySS. Trabajo,
ocupación y empleo: relaciones laborales, territorios y
grupos particulares de actividad. (Work, occupation and employment:
labour relations, territories and specific activity groups). Buenos
Aires, 2005. (Estudios, 3)
IOE.The
Informal Economy - an Employers' Approach. 2001
Oliva Alonzo, R. (Coord.) Trámites,
costos, tiempo y dificultades que deben enfrentar los empresarios
del sector informal para incorporarse al sector formal de la economía
guatemalteca. (Proceedings, costs, time and difficutlies encountered
by entrepreneurs of the informal sector to enter the formal sector
of the Guatemalan economy). Guatemala: University of San Carlos
de Guatemala (USAC); Guatemalan Programme to Support the Informal
Sector (PROSIGUA), 1999.
This field research intends to inform about the offices where
enterprises can be legally registered in Guatemala, the proceedings
to be followed, requirements to be fulfilled and the times and
costs to be assumed. It also seeks to determine the main reasons
why many entrepreneurs remain in the informal sector of the economy.
With the purpose of establishing the possible reasons, the field
research deemed it necessary to base itself on some interviews
to micro entrepreneurs.
In order to achieve these objectives, two types of written instruments
were prepared: interview pads and observation guides. All in all,
seven instruments were used. These are enumerated here together
with the results obtained by using them and their interpretation.
Pérez Herrera, G. Mujer,
mercado de trabajo e informalidad. (Women, labour market and
informality). Article 2.2 In: Pérez Herrera, G. Sector
informal y sindicalismo en América Latina. (Informal sector
and trade unionism in Latin America). Proyecto Educación
y organización para la acción en el sector informal
(Project on Education and organisation of actions in the informal
sector) - EOASI CIOSL - ORIT/FNV. Article 2.2
Pérez Ruiz, A. El
comercio informal: una respuesta ante la crisis. (Informal
trade: a response to the crisis). Online workers. v. 6, n. 29,
Mar-Apr. 2002.
Pok, Cynthia. 2001. La
Medición del Sector Informal en Argentina. (Measuring
the informal sector in Argentina). Background Paper for the Latin
American Regional Workshop on Statistics in the Informal Economy,
October 2001.
Portes, A.; Haller, W. La
economía informal. (The informal economy). Santiago,
Chile: ECLAC, 2004. (Social Policies, 100)
The objective of this paper is to analyse the way in which the
activities developed by informal enterprises interact with the
existing social structures and the control practices and policies
of national States. After analysing several possible definitions
and measure approaches, the paper concentrates on these dynamic
factors which focus on four paradoxes: the social principles of
informal economy; the ambiguity of the relationship with State
regulations; the difficulty to define it; its functionality regarding
the economic and political institutions it is believed to undermine.
Riquelme Peña, M.; Munizaga, J.C. Percepción
de su identidad, del SENCE y la capacitación por parte
de microempresarios y trabajadores independientes. (Perceptions
on its identity, SENCE and training by micro entrepreneurs and
freelance workers). Cuadernos de Estudio N°1. Santiago, Chile,
February 2005.
The objective of this paper is to get familiarised with the needs
of micro entrepreneurs and freelance workers and draw up a basic
"brief" to call for tenders of an advertising campaign
that promotes the training demand in this sector. It is a descriptive
study that aims at qualifying and specifying some of the characteristics
of the group of micro entrepreneurs and freelance workers. This
research is not empirical since the phenomenon will be observed
as it takes place in its natural context without the manipulation
of variables.
Rodrik, D. ¿Por
qué hay tanta inseguridad económica en América
Latina? (Why is there such economic insecurity in Latin America?)
ECLAC Magazine. Santiago, Chile, ECLAC. N. 73, 2001.
The author holds that economic insecurity in Latin America has
multiple aspects and comes from sources that feed reciprocally.
Part of such insecurity stems from the declining employment protection
and an increasing volatility of home income. It is partly due
to the erratic flows of capital and the systemic instability generated
by the separation between stabilisation instruments and the real
economy, and partly due to the weakness of expression (voice)
and representation institutions.
It suggest the need to add macroeconomic policies to social protection
programmes that contribute to the stability of the real economy.
In addition, it is necessary to have access to representative
institutions - trade unions, political parties and legislative
bodies - with more sensitivity and legitimacy. It concludes that
what Latin America probably needs the most is a vision on how
to maintain social cohesion as opposed to inequality and volatile
results, both worsened by a growing trust in market forces. This
vision softens the tension between market forces and the yearning
for economic security.
Singh, M. (Coord.) Meeting
basic learning needs in the informal sector: integrating education
and training for decent work, empowerment and citizenship.
Dordrecht: Springer; UNEVOC, 2005. 250p. (Technical and vocational
education and training series, 2)
The aim of this volume is to provide accounts of learning and
training programmes in the informal sector that range over the
vast territory of educational activity and give young people and
adults an opportunity to gain the knowledge and develop the values,
attitudes and skills which will enable them to improve their capacities
to work, participate fully in their societies, take control of
their own lives and continue learning. The programmes are significant
in that they attempt to integrate education and training. Special
emphasis is placed on the participation of all stakeholders, especially
civil society organisations and social movements.
Tokman, V. Integrating
the informal sector in the modernization process. Development
Forum on Productive Employment and Decent Work. UN Department
of Economic and Social Affairs, 8-9 May 2006
Veleda da Silva, S. M. Trabajo
informal, género y cultura: el comercio callejero e informal
en el sur de Brasil. (Informal work, gender and culture: street
commerce and informal trade in the South of Brazil). Barcelona:
Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, 2003.
This paper intends to examine the situation of street vendors
in Brazil from the starting point of the analysis of their work
and family situation.
Street vendors are described according to sex, age, place of birth,
schooling, profession, marital status, number of children, type
of family, spouse's profession and individual and family income.
This description will allow to study the relationship 'precarious
job - place - family' from a cultural and gender perspective,
focusing on the possibility that this relationship may lead to
the production and reproduction of new identities based on the
occupation of public spaces.
Vianna da Cruz, J.L. Trabalho,
Renda e Desenvolvimento Local: Algumas Questões. In:
Boletím Técnico do Senac. Rio de Janeiro, SENAC.
v.25, n. 27, 1.
This article intends to approach the complexity of the analysis
on the potential proposals and practices of Local Economic Development
(LED) as means of tackling the historical challenge of generating
jobs and income in Brazil.
LED has emerged during the last decades as a means to give value
to work, citizenship, integration and equity, both in developed
countries and underdeveloped ones.
It is based on low-income micro and small enterprises, where the
agreement among local actors has particular importance. It implies
new ways of production, where these enterprises can form networks
in order to achieve further innovation, competitiveness and complementarity.
All of this based on the community, where the territory acquires
importance and cultures, values and the own identity can be rescued,
and new institutions can be engaged in new ways to obtain credit
and offer training and research.
Yannoulas, S. C. Perspectivas
de género y políticas de formación e inserción
laboral en América Latina. (Gender perspectives and
training and labour insertion policies in Latin America). Buenos
Aires: Red Etis: IIPE: IDES, 2005. 58 p. (Trends and debates;
4)
|