Temporary Agency Work as a Means of Achieving Flexicurity?
After decades of debate about flexibility, flexicurity has become a new buzzword in working life. Flexicurity refers to both the employer’s demand for flexibility and the employee’s demand for security. Thus, the idea is to solve the flexibility–security trade-off. There is also a discussion that me...
Main Authors: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Aalborg University
2012-11-01
|
Series: | Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://tidsskrift.dk/njwls/article/view/26619 |
id |
doaj-ca21f08e532a4645be6f30d1e5a95a36 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-ca21f08e532a4645be6f30d1e5a95a362020-11-24T21:54:06ZengAalborg UniversityNordic Journal of Working Life Studies2245-01572012-11-012410.19154/njwls.v2i4.230924015Temporary Agency Work as a Means of Achieving Flexicurity?Kristina Håkansson0Tommy Isidorsson1Hannes Kantelius2Department of Sociology and Work Science, University of GothenburgDepartment of Sociology and Work Science, University of GothenburgDepartment of Sociology and Work Science, University of GothenburgAfter decades of debate about flexibility, flexicurity has become a new buzzword in working life. Flexicurity refers to both the employer’s demand for flexibility and the employee’s demand for security. Thus, the idea is to solve the flexibility–security trade-off. There is also a discussion that mentions temporary agency work as one way of creating a flexicurity system. The flexibility potential is not called into question—numerical flexibility is a quite common motive for using temporary agency workers. However, the security dimension has to be scrutinized. The aim of this article is to analyze the temporary work agency industry’s potential for providing the security dimensions of the flexicurity model in a Swedish context. The study is based on a survey of whitecollar temporary agency workers in Sweden (n = 533). Overall, the vast majority do not perceive security. Our most important result is that both the work agency and the user firm have a dual impact on the agency workers’ perception of security.https://tidsskrift.dk/njwls/article/view/26619Employmentwagesunemployment & rehabilitation |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Kristina Håkansson Tommy Isidorsson Hannes Kantelius |
spellingShingle |
Kristina Håkansson Tommy Isidorsson Hannes Kantelius Temporary Agency Work as a Means of Achieving Flexicurity? Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies Employment wages unemployment & rehabilitation |
author_facet |
Kristina Håkansson Tommy Isidorsson Hannes Kantelius |
author_sort |
Kristina Håkansson |
title |
Temporary Agency Work as a Means of Achieving Flexicurity? |
title_short |
Temporary Agency Work as a Means of Achieving Flexicurity? |
title_full |
Temporary Agency Work as a Means of Achieving Flexicurity? |
title_fullStr |
Temporary Agency Work as a Means of Achieving Flexicurity? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Temporary Agency Work as a Means of Achieving Flexicurity? |
title_sort |
temporary agency work as a means of achieving flexicurity? |
publisher |
Aalborg University |
series |
Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies |
issn |
2245-0157 |
publishDate |
2012-11-01 |
description |
After decades of debate about flexibility, flexicurity has become a new buzzword in working life. Flexicurity refers to both the employer’s demand for flexibility and the employee’s demand for security. Thus, the idea is to solve the flexibility–security trade-off. There is also a discussion that mentions temporary agency work as one way of creating a flexicurity system. The flexibility potential is not called into question—numerical flexibility is a quite common motive for using temporary agency workers. However, the security dimension has to be scrutinized. The aim of this article is to analyze the temporary work agency industry’s potential for providing the security dimensions of the flexicurity model in a Swedish context. The study is based on a survey of whitecollar temporary agency workers in Sweden (n = 533). Overall, the vast majority do not perceive security. Our most important result is that both the work agency and the user firm have a dual impact on the agency workers’ perception of security. |
topic |
Employment wages unemployment & rehabilitation |
url |
https://tidsskrift.dk/njwls/article/view/26619 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kristinahakansson temporaryagencyworkasameansofachievingflexicurity AT tommyisidorsson temporaryagencyworkasameansofachievingflexicurity AT hanneskantelius temporaryagencyworkasameansofachievingflexicurity |
_version_ |
1725868918605611008 |