Sheltered employment / Sheltered Workshops

Posted in: darrelrussell.com edit
08 Jan 2009
  • I am looking for specific, detailed sources relating to the interaction between Sheltered Workshops and the competitive labor market. Most importantly, pdf's or citations to economic research which studies how sheltered workshops affect the regular labor market. The more sources and better synopsii of the source you can provide me with, the happier I will be. I would prefer stuff on the OBSCURE side, as I am perfectly able to google and search my university's research databases myself. The answerer to this question would ideally have some sort of expert knowledge on this subject and be privvy to information or resources a law student would not or not be aware of.


  • HI Title: Equally unequal: Gender discrimination in the workplace among adults with mental retardation. Authors: Julius, Elona Wolfson, Hagit Yalon-Chamovitz, Shira Source: Work; 2003, Vol. 20 Issue 3, p205, 9p Document Type: Article Subject Terms: *EMPLOYMENT (Economic theory) *INDUSTRIAL relations *PEOPLE with mental disabilities *WAGES SEX discrimination in employment Abstract: Gender discrimination in the work place has been widely reported. Women are usually discriminated against both with respect to level of occupation and salary. The current study explored the correlation between gender and employment among adults with mental retardation, specifically, whether gender discrimination in the work place is as prominent among people with mental retardation as in the general population. Level of occupation and salary earned were studied in 227 adults with mild and moderate mental retardation residing in institutions, hostels, and sheltered homes in Israel. The findings suggest a correlation between gender and employment similar to that in the general population. Women were found to be employed mainly in sheltered workshops and lower levels of occupation, and to earn significantly less than the men. However, closer examination of each work place revealed that within each level of occupation there were no significant gender differences in salary. The finding suggests that while women with mental retardation earn lower salaries than men, this is mainly the result of their lower level of occupation. Rehabilitation efforts should therefore be directed toward ensuring higher levels of occupation as well as community employment among women with mental retardation II. Authors: Rose, Nancy E.1 Source: Journal of Economic Issues; Jun99, Vol. 33 Issue 2, p453, 8p Document Type: Article Subject Terms: *CAPITALISM *ECONOMIC policy *EMPLOYMENT (Economic theory) *MANPOWER policy *MONETARY policy *UNEMPLOYMENT Geographic Terms: UNITED States NAICS/Industry Codes: 92 Public Administration Abstract: Policies to reduce unemployment have been an integral component of government programs in most developed capitalist countries since the end of World War II. Yet this "employment policy" sounds like an oxymoron of sorts in the U.S. While the U.S. has pursued full employment policy only in fits and starts, the national governments of most Western European countries have elaborated explicit commitments to employment policies designed to decrease joblessness. These policies have encompassed the following range of programs: fiscal and monetary policy to stimulate aggregate demand; direct payments to the unemployed; job placement services; policies to reduce the labor force, including increasing job flexibility, reducing the workweek, and promoting early retirement; policies aimed at industrial mobility, primarily getting industries to locate in areas of high unemployment; and active labor market policy, which includes programs to increase labor market mobility, training and retraining, sheltered training workshops and employer subsidies for harder-to-employ populations such as the disabled and older workers, and direct job creation in the public and nonprofit sectors. III. Authors: Li-Tsang, C.W.P. Weiss, P.L. (Tamar) Curtis, John Source: Work; 2003, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p45, 7p Document Type: Article Subject Terms: *EMPLOYMENT (Economic theory) *LABOR laws & legislation *PERSONNEL management DISABILITY evaluation Geographic Terms: GREAT Britain NAICS/Industry Codes: 56111 Office Administrative Services Abstract: In 1996, a paper (Floyd, 1996), on the Vocational Rehabilitation Services in the United Kingdom, reviewed the way in which the services had evolved during the past 50 years, since the end of the second world war. The author described the Disabled Persons (Employment) Act 1944 and the development of rehabilitation and placement services and sheltered workshops over the years. He also gave readers a glimpse of possible future changes, and, in particular, speculated that the UK might follow the United States in the professional training and development of employment and vocational rehabilitation personnel.This paper describes first the main services currently provided by Government and then outlines the quite significant legislative changes and one major policy development that have taken place in the past five years. This includes an overview of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 which came into force in late 1996, a brief look at some of the early outcomes, and describes the latest proposals for amendment. A description of the major policy development (New Deal for Disabled People) is also given but it is too soon to report on its effectiveness. Whether the changes will lead to any lasting improvement in labour market participation by disabled people, remains an unanswered question; certainly, up to the present, from a statistical point of view, it seems that the position remains much the same (Curtis J, forthcoming). The paper concludes with discussion of the latest key issues and returns to the question raised in 1996 about the training of employment and rehabilitation personnel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] IV. Title: Attainment, Gender and Minimum-aged School Leavers' Early Routes in the Labour Market. Authors: Biggart, Andy Source: Journal of Education & Work; Jun2002, Vol. 15 Issue 2, p145, 18p Document Type: Article Subject Terms: *LABOR market DROPOUTS -- Employment Geographic Terms: SCOTLAND Abstract: This article uses data from the Scottish School Leavers' Surveys from the mid-1990s to examine the impact of leaving school at the minimum age for low attainers, with a particular focus on the differences between young males and females. The findings question two general claims that have been made in terms of recent labour market trends: the 'feminisation' of the labour market, and the process of 'qualification inflation'. The article argues that current conceptions of these processes have failed to take account of the gendered and age-structured nature of the labour market. The analysis highlights the relatively favourable position of the young males in their early years in the labour market, compared to the females. Drawing on labour market segmentation theory, the article argues that low-attaining males have benefited from sheltered entry points within particular segments, whereas low-attaining females, although fewer in number, appear to be sidelined by employers in favour of adult women and better-qualified school leavers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] Maybe it is usefull to you. Peace.







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