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Anne Green
key features of the future agenda for researchers concerned with labour market
geographies, and also a central question around which policy-relevant research
could be focused.
Context
In the introductory chapter to ‘Geographies of Labour Market Inequality’,
Martin and Morrison (2003) provide a useful overview of the changing world of
work, which sets the context for academics and policy analysts concerned with
the geography of labour markets. In simple schematic format, they identify four
key forces of change: structural change (encompassing deindustrialisation, tertiari-
sation and privatisation); technological change (incorporating computerisation,
informalisation and digitisation); globalisation (subsuming deepening, intensifi-
cation and speed-up of international interactions and inter-dependencies); and
deregulation and re-regulation (characterised by shifting power back to employers
and a shift to active labour market policies). Amongst the main labour market
impacts of these changes they identify the sectoral recomposition of employment,
the skill recomposition of work, the gender recomposition of employment, union
decline and new work relations, increased vulnerability to unemployment, casual-
isation and increased job insecurity, and widening of wage and income disparities.
This brief overview provides some insight into the reach and depth of the
agenda, and the multiplicity of issues and impacts, facing economic geographers
researching the geography of labour markets. It is not possible to touch on all of
these issues here, but they are illustrative of the range of topics studied by geog-
raphers and other labour market analysts, and, more particularly, they set the
context for key policy issues.
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