The Precariat: The New Dangerous ClassFirst published in 2011 The Precariat is the hugely influential first account of an emerging class of people facing insecurity, moving in and out of precarious work that gives little meaning to their lives. Standing warns that the growth of the precariat is producing instabilities in society. Its internal divisions have led to the villainization of migrants and other vulnerable groups and some are susceptible to the dangers of political extremism. Standing argues for a new politics which puts the fears and aspirations of the precariat at the heart of a progressive strategy of redistribution and income security. The precariat is an increasingly global phenomenon, highly visible in the ongoing migrant crisis and protest movements around the world. In a new preface for the Revelations edition Guy Standing discusses recent political developments and their effect on the precariat. |
Contents
The Precariat | |
Who Enters the Precariat? | |
Victims Villains or Heroes? | |
Labour Work and the Time Squeeze | |
A Politics of Inferno | |
A Politics of Paradise | |
Bibliography | |
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Common terms and phrases
agencies basic income become behaviour capital career cent China Chindia Chinese citizens citizenship commodification companies contracts costs criminalised deliberative democracy demonised denizens earnings economic Economist employees employment security enterprise benefits EuroMayDay Facebook fear firms flexible labour Foxconn freeter Gilles Deleuze globalisation groups growing growth here-here hukou identity immigrants industrial industrialised inequality insecurity International Japan labour force labour market leisure living long-term market society migrants million mobility National neo-fascism neo-liberal Obama occupational OECD old agers organisations panopticon part-time Party pension political politicians populist precariat precariatised precarious precarity trap proficians public sector recession rise salariat salaryman schooling shadow economy share shift skills social democratic social income sousveillance status subsidies temporary jobs tertiary society today’s unemployed unions United Kingdom University wages women work-for-labour workers workfare workplace young youth


