Flesh Peddlers and Warm Bodies: The Temporary Help Industry and Its Workers (The Arnold and Caroline Rose Monograph Series of the American)

$15.00 CAD

pp.174.paperback edition.”Several recent books have touted the benefits of working as a temporary employee, but now Parker, an associate professor of sociology at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas and onetime temp himself, portrays a dark side to the temporary-help industry. In spite of its title, this book is a scholarly look at what Parker calls “contingent work.” He identifies the major companies in the industry, profiles who become temps, and describes where temporary workers are most heavily utilized. While acknowledging advantages for some workers, he also describes negative aspects of such work: low pay, few fringe benefits and usually no health coverage, irregular hours, underutilization of skills, hazardous working conditions, circumvention of equal opportunity programs, etc. Parker also claims a major reason companies use temps is to undermine labor-organizing efforts. Because temporary workers may actually make up one-third of this nation’s workforce, Parker’s book will be an important addition to business and labor collections”

In stock

SKU: 232339 Category:

Book Information

ISBN 0813520894
ISBN13 9780813520896
Number of pages 174
Original Title Flesh Peddlers and Warm Bodies: The Temporary Help Industry and Its Workers (The Arnold and Caroline Rose Monograph Series of the American)
Published Date 1994
Book Condition Very good
Jacket Condition No Dustjacket
Binding Paperback
Size 8vo
Place of Publication New Brunswick
Category:
Author:
Publisher:

Description

pp.174.paperback edition.”Several recent books have touted the benefits of working as a temporary employee, but now Parker, an associate professor of sociology at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas and onetime temp himself, portrays a dark side to the temporary-help industry. In spite of its title, this book is a scholarly look at what Parker calls “contingent work.” He identifies the major companies in the industry, profiles who become temps, and describes where temporary workers are most heavily utilized. While acknowledging advantages for some workers, he also describes negative aspects of such work: low pay, few fringe benefits and usually no health coverage, irregular hours, underutilization of skills, hazardous working conditions, circumvention of equal opportunity programs, etc. Parker also claims a major reason companies use temps is to undermine labor-organizing efforts. Because temporary workers may actually make up one-third of this nation’s workforce, Parker’s book will be an important addition to business and labor collections”

Additional information

Weight 1 kg