Professional Workers (professional + worker)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Get Back into that Kitchen, Woman: Management Conferences and the Making of the Female Professional Worker

GENDER, WORK & ORGANISATION, Issue 5 2010
Jackie Ford
Conferences are a little studied aspect of working lives. In this article we explore how management conferences contribute to the continuing imbalance of power between men and women in management. We analyse data gathered from a reflexive ethnographic study of a management conference. We show that women arrive at conferences as knowing subjects, able easily to occupy the subject position of conference participant, but they are then subjected to processes of infantilization and seduction. They are made to feel scared and are given the order, as were their mothers and grandmothers: get back to the kitchen. We avoid using a theoretical explanation for these findings, preferring to offer them without much explanation, for we favour instead a political approach, and we use the findings as a way of making a call to arms to change the ways in which conferences are hostile to women. [source]


STRUCTURAL INEQUALITY AND HOMICIDE: AN ASSESSMENT OF THE BLACK-WHITE GAP IN KILLINGS,

CRIMINOLOGY, Issue 3 2003
MARÍA B. VÉLEZ
This paper examines the relationship between race and violent crime by directly modeling the racial gap in homicide offending for large central cities for 1990. We evaluate the role of black-white differences in aspects of both disadvantage and resources in explaining which places have wider racial disparities in lethal violence. The results show that where residential segregation is higher, and where whites' levels of homeownership, median income, college graduation, and professional workers exceed those for blacks to a greater degree, African Americans have much higher levels of homicide offending than whites. Based on these results, we conclude that the racial homicide gap is better explained by the greater resources that exist among whites than by the higher levels of disadvantage among blacks. [source]


The epidemiology of autistic spectrum disorders: is the prevalence rising?

DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES RESEARCH REVIEW, Issue 3 2002
Lorna Wing
Abstract For decades after Kanner's original paper on the subject was published in 1943, autism was generally considered to be a rare condition with a prevalence of around 2,4 per 10,000 children. Then, studies carried out in the late 1990s and the present century reported annual rises in incidence of autism in pre-school children, based on age of diagnosis, and increases in the age-specific prevalence rates in children. Prevalence rates of up to 60 per 10,000 for autism and even more for the whole autistic spectrum were reported. Reasons for these increases are discussed. They include changes in diagnostic criteria, development of the concept of the wide autistic spectrum, different methods used in studies, growing awareness and knowledge among parents and professional workers and the development of specialist services, as well as the possibility of a true increase in numbers. Various environmental causes for a genuine rise in incidence have been suggested, including the triple vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella (MMR]. Not one of the possible environmental causes, including MMR, has been confirmed by independent scientific investigation, whereas there is strong evidence that complex genetic factors play a major role in etiology. The evidence suggests that the majority, if not all, of the reported rise in incidence and prevalence is due to changes in diagnostic criteria and increasing awareness and recognition of autistic spectrum disorders. Whether there is also a genuine rise in incidence remains an open question. MRDD Research Reviews 2002;8:151,161. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


International Migration Policies: 1950-2000

INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION, Issue 6 2001
Reginald Appleyard
Policies on international migration since the Second World War reflect the enormous changes in economic, social and political situations around the world. The implications of changes in the volume and composition of international migration have increasingly become an issue of major concern to governments in all countries. Following emigration from Europe to countries of the New World as a result of war-damaged economies, reconstruction witnessed high demand for migrant labour, mainly from parts of southern Europe. But by the early 1970s, decline in economic growth, unexpected impacts of the guest-worker scheme, and an increase in refugees from Third World countries led, in due course, to an era of restriction on entry of asylum-seekers and tighter controls over undocumented migration to developed countries. A "new era" evolved during the 1990s, characterized by growing interdependence of major economic powers. Globalization led not only to a significant demand for highly-skilled and professional workers, but also to decision-making on some aspects of the migration process being transferred from the national to the regional level, and an increase in the influence of multinational corporations. The globalization process, and the growing influence of international trade regimes, may well represent the first steps towards a new "international migration regime" that incorporates all types of migration. [source]


Identification of occupational cancer risk in British Columbia: A population-based case,control study of 2,998 lung cancers by histopathological subtype

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE, Issue 3 2009
Amy C. MacArthur MHSc
Abstract Background Few studies have investigated occupational lung cancer risk in relation to specific histopathological subtypes. Methods A case,control study was conducted to evaluate the relationship between lung cancer and occupation/industry of employment by histopathological subtype. A total of 2,998 male cases and 10,223 cancer controls, diagnosed between 1983 and 1990, were identified through the British Columbia Cancer Registry. Matched on age and year of diagnosis, conditional logistic regression analyses were performed for two different estimates of exposure with adjustment for potentially important confounding variables, including tobacco smoking, alcohol consumption, marital status, educational attainment, and questionnaire respondent. Results For all lung cancers, an excess risk was observed for workers in the primary metal (OR,=,1.31, 95% CI, 1.01,1.71), mining (OR,=,1.53, 95% CI, 1.20,1.96), machining (OR,=,1.33, 95% CI, 1.09,1.63), transport (OR,=,1.50, 95% CI, 1.08,2.07), utility (OR,=,1.60, 95% CI, 1.22,2.09), and protective services (OR,=,1.27, 95% CI, 1.05,1.55) industries. Associations with histopathological subtypes included an increased risk of squamous cell carcinoma in construction trades (OR,=,1.25, 95% CI, 1.06,1.48), adenocarcinoma for professional workers in medicine and health (OR,=,1.73, 95% CI, 1.18,2.53), small cell carcinoma in railway (OR,=,1.62, 95% CI, 1.06,2.49), and truck transport industries (OR,=,1.51, 95% CI, 1.00,2.28), and large cell carcinoma for employment in the primary metal industry (OR,=,2.35, 95% CI, 1.11,4.96). Conclusions Our results point to excess lung cancer risk for occupations involving exposure to metals, polyaromatic hydrocarbons and asbestos, as well as several new histopathologic-specific associations that merit further investigation. Am. J. Ind. Med. 52:221,232, 2009. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]