This edited volume on Identities at Work brings together international theory and empirical research that deals with continuity and change of identity formation processes at work under conditions of modern working processes and labour market flexibility.
By bringing together perspectives from sociology, psychology, organisational management and vocational education and training the contributions in this volume connect the debates of skills formation, human resources development and careers with individuals work commitment and professional orientations in various ways. With this focus the volume presents a new research perspective based on an interdisciplinary and international approach. We argue that in times of globalisation and rapidly changing work realities such an approach is needed to better understand and analyse what is required to equip and prepare the workforce to meet international labour market demands. In this sense the publication shall serve as a useful resource to researchers and policy makers working in the fields of skills formation, human resources development and organisational management.
Vocational Identity in Theory and Empirical Research.- Decomposing and Recomposing Occupational IdentitiesA Survey of Theoretical Concepts.- Tensions in the Vocational Identity of Danish Bankers.- The Role of Developing a Vocational Identity for WomenThe Example of Young Single German Mothers.- The Double Vocational Identity of the Working Population in the Greek Tourist Industry.- Vocational Education and TrainingA European Perspective.- Work and Personal Identity.- Career Changes and Identity ContinuitiesA Contradiction?.- Exercising Self Through Working Life: Learning, Work and Identity.- The Much Vaunted Flexible EmployeeWhat Does it Take?.- Work and Commitment.- The Dynamics Between Organisational Commitment and Professional Identity Formation at Work.- Apprentices' Experiences of Occupational and Organisational Commitment: An Empirical Investigation in a German Automobile Company.- The Individualisation of Identification with Work in a European Perspective.- Work Identity in the Japanese Context: Stereotype and Reality.- Modern Work and the Creation of New Professional Identities.- The Construction of a New Professional Self: A Critical Reading of the Curricula for Nurses and Computer Engineers in Norway.- US Efforts to Create a New Professional Identity for the Bioscience Industry.