Exit Tales: How Precarious Workers Navigate Bad Jobs. Sallaz, J. J. Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 46(5):573–599, October, 2017.
Exit Tales: How Precarious Workers Navigate Bad Jobs [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Why do some workers quit undignified “bad jobs,” while others persist in them? We know a great deal about how people find employment, along with what they do at work. But we have few studies documenting the lived experience of quitting a bad job. Recent structural transformations, such as the demise of Fordism and the curtailment of welfare, have surely recalibrated the strategies by which precarious individuals navigate the labor market. This article, an ethnography that follows a single cohort of call center employees over nine months, documents four main pathways through which such workers leave versus stay in their jobs. It argues that the emergent class of precarious workers is not homogenous. Gender, race, and age intersect with class to shape how one experiences a given bad job.
@article{sallaz_exit_2017,
	title = {Exit {Tales}: {How} {Precarious} {Workers} {Navigate} {Bad} {Jobs}},
	volume = {46},
	issn = {0891-2416},
	shorttitle = {Exit {Tales}},
	url = {https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241615625458},
	doi = {10.1177/0891241615625458},
	abstract = {Why do some workers quit undignified “bad jobs,” while others persist in them? We know a great deal about how people find employment, along with what they do at work. But we have few studies documenting the lived experience of quitting a bad job. Recent structural transformations, such as the demise of Fordism and the curtailment of welfare, have surely recalibrated the strategies by which precarious individuals navigate the labor market. This article, an ethnography that follows a single cohort of call center employees over nine months, documents four main pathways through which such workers leave versus stay in their jobs. It argues that the emergent class of precarious workers is not homogenous. Gender, race, and age intersect with class to shape how one experiences a given bad job.},
	language = {en},
	number = {5},
	urldate = {2019-01-05},
	journal = {Journal of Contemporary Ethnography},
	author = {Sallaz, Jeffrey J.},
	month = oct,
	year = {2017},
	pages = {573--599},
}

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