The role of vocational education in the transmission of gender segregation from education to employment: Switzerland and Bulgaria compared

Abstract Previous comparative research has uncovered considerable cross-country differences in occupational gender segregation. There is, however, a lack of research on the role of educational systems in the creation of gender segregation and gendered school-to-work transitions. The aim of this stud...

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Main Authors: Melina Heiniger, Christian Imdorf
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-12-01
Series:Journal for Labour Market Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12651-018-0248-6
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spelling doaj-feef4eb342954174b77285bd1de75d0e2020-11-24T21:40:07ZengSpringerOpenJournal for Labour Market Research2510-50192510-50272018-12-0152112110.1186/s12651-018-0248-6The role of vocational education in the transmission of gender segregation from education to employment: Switzerland and Bulgaria comparedMelina Heiniger0Christian Imdorf1Institute of Sociology, University of BernDepartment of Sociology and Political Science, Norwegian University of Science and Technology NTNUAbstract Previous comparative research has uncovered considerable cross-country differences in occupational gender segregation. There is, however, a lack of research on the role of educational systems in the creation of gender segregation and gendered school-to-work transitions. The aim of this study is to investigate the role of vocational education and the strength of the education–employment linkage in the transmission of horizontal gender segregation from education into the labour market. Transition system literature points to a stronger linkage between education and employment in countries where initial vocational education and training dominates the educational offers, and to a weaker linkage in countries with a stronger focus on general education. Moreover, research on gender segregation in education shows that segregation is especially pronounced in educational systems with a strong vocational education and training sector on the upper secondary level. Based on these insights, we hypothesize that gender segregation in education and its transmission to employment is more pronounced the more distinct a country’s initial vocational education and training system is. To test our assumption, we compare individual school-to-work transitions in Switzerland and Bulgaria, with the vocational principle being more prevalent in the structuring of Swiss educational offers. We use data from the Swiss Youth Panel Survey TREE (N = 3215) and the Bulgarian School Leaver Survey BSLS (N = 885). Following recent developments in multi-group segregation research, entropy-based measurements are calculated to study the school-to-work linkages and the transmission of gender segregation in the two select countries. The empirical results confirm a more pronounced educational gender segregation in Switzerland, which is transferred more strongly into the labour market due to the tighter linkage in that country between education and employment compared to Bulgaria.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12651-018-0248-6Gender segregationVocational educationLabour marketEducation–employment linkageBulgariaSwitzerland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Melina Heiniger
Christian Imdorf
spellingShingle Melina Heiniger
Christian Imdorf
The role of vocational education in the transmission of gender segregation from education to employment: Switzerland and Bulgaria compared
Journal for Labour Market Research
Gender segregation
Vocational education
Labour market
Education–employment linkage
Bulgaria
Switzerland
author_facet Melina Heiniger
Christian Imdorf
author_sort Melina Heiniger
title The role of vocational education in the transmission of gender segregation from education to employment: Switzerland and Bulgaria compared
title_short The role of vocational education in the transmission of gender segregation from education to employment: Switzerland and Bulgaria compared
title_full The role of vocational education in the transmission of gender segregation from education to employment: Switzerland and Bulgaria compared
title_fullStr The role of vocational education in the transmission of gender segregation from education to employment: Switzerland and Bulgaria compared
title_full_unstemmed The role of vocational education in the transmission of gender segregation from education to employment: Switzerland and Bulgaria compared
title_sort role of vocational education in the transmission of gender segregation from education to employment: switzerland and bulgaria compared
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal for Labour Market Research
issn 2510-5019
2510-5027
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Abstract Previous comparative research has uncovered considerable cross-country differences in occupational gender segregation. There is, however, a lack of research on the role of educational systems in the creation of gender segregation and gendered school-to-work transitions. The aim of this study is to investigate the role of vocational education and the strength of the education–employment linkage in the transmission of horizontal gender segregation from education into the labour market. Transition system literature points to a stronger linkage between education and employment in countries where initial vocational education and training dominates the educational offers, and to a weaker linkage in countries with a stronger focus on general education. Moreover, research on gender segregation in education shows that segregation is especially pronounced in educational systems with a strong vocational education and training sector on the upper secondary level. Based on these insights, we hypothesize that gender segregation in education and its transmission to employment is more pronounced the more distinct a country’s initial vocational education and training system is. To test our assumption, we compare individual school-to-work transitions in Switzerland and Bulgaria, with the vocational principle being more prevalent in the structuring of Swiss educational offers. We use data from the Swiss Youth Panel Survey TREE (N = 3215) and the Bulgarian School Leaver Survey BSLS (N = 885). Following recent developments in multi-group segregation research, entropy-based measurements are calculated to study the school-to-work linkages and the transmission of gender segregation in the two select countries. The empirical results confirm a more pronounced educational gender segregation in Switzerland, which is transferred more strongly into the labour market due to the tighter linkage in that country between education and employment compared to Bulgaria.
topic Gender segregation
Vocational education
Labour market
Education–employment linkage
Bulgaria
Switzerland
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12651-018-0248-6
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