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Global knowledge capitalism, self-woven safety nets, and the crisis of employability

Moore, P

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Authors

P Moore



Abstract

In the global economy, workers are increasingly expected to cultivate an unprecedented repertoire of abilities in an immaterial world of work. This signifies a limited shift in capitalist expansion in the post-Fordist world in relation to workers' employability therein. A model of worker subjectivity was introduced into Western management and psychology discourse surrounding employability in the 1960s and 1970s. In a developed, post-industrial global economy, management has begun to view workers less as cogs in the wheel or less as rational and predictable entities than as dynamic individuals with the capacity for symbolic reasoning, intelligence, independently generated ideas, and even the desire to work for the sake of self-fulfilment! The Fordist workplace was expected to become a distant memory and organisations were to become “learning organisations” rather than the hierarchical, Dickensian workfloors of the manufacturing age. Nevertheless, rather than offering freedom from the iron cage of capitalism, workers face a contemporary form of coercion that substitutes political representation with a set of expectations and limitations intended, ironically, to result in workplace emancipation. Emphasis on employability of individuals through workers' creation of self-woven safety nets demonstrates an elite-led project to reduce government responsibility for employment welfare. In order to make this claim, the article looks at the case of education policy in South Korea after the economic crisis of 1997.

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2006
Deposit Date Sep 13, 2011
Publicly Available Date Apr 5, 2016
Journal Global Society
Print ISSN 1360-0826
Electronic ISSN 1469-798X
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 20
Issue 4
Pages 453-473
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/13600820600929812
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13600820600929812
Additional Information Additional Information : This is a preprint of an article submitted for consideration in the Global Society © 2006 (copyright Taylor & Francis); Global Society is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13600820600929812

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