Temporary Employment, Permanent Stigma? Perceptions of Temporary Agency Workers Across Low- and High-Skilled Jobs

Research on temporary agency work emphasizes that temporary agency workers (TAWs), particularly those in low-skilled jobs associated with precariousness and low social prestige, are likely to be exposed to poor treatment, as well as stigmatization. On the contrary, stigmatization of TAWs in high-ski...

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Main Authors: Pia Cardone, Markus Tümpel, Christian M. Huber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lodz University Press 2021-07-01
Series:Qualitative Sociology Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/qualit/article/view/10380
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spelling doaj-9b0ce21ef2ca49dba5c9178981a3f8232021-08-16T11:00:25ZengLodz University PressQualitative Sociology Review1733-80772021-07-0117363310.18778/1733-8077.17.3.0110279Temporary Employment, Permanent Stigma? Perceptions of Temporary Agency Workers Across Low- and High-Skilled JobsPia Cardone0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3724-280XMarkus Tümpel1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7233-5502Christian M. Huber2https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1168-3495Chemnitz University of Technology, GermanyChemnitz University of Technology, GermanyChemnitz University of Technology, GermanyResearch on temporary agency work emphasizes that temporary agency workers (TAWs), particularly those in low-skilled jobs associated with precariousness and low social prestige, are likely to be exposed to poor treatment, as well as stigmatization. On the contrary, stigmatization of TAWs in high-skilled jobs has not been treated in much detail in previous studies. Literature provides an incomplete picture of stigmatization within the broader field of temporary employment regarding the focus on low-skilled jobs. Hence, the present qualitative study is based on data from interviews of a heterogeneous sample of TAWs employed in low- and high-skilled jobs in Germany. By using and modifying Boyce and colleagues’ (2007) model of stigmatization, the study shows that stigmatizing treatment towards TAWs occurs across all skill levels, although the intensity and form of those experiences, as well as coping strategies, differ. Thereby, this study contributes to a more differentiated and skill level-specific understanding of how TAWs perceive and cope with stigmatization linked to their employment status. It also provides an important opportunity to advance Boyce and colleagues’ (2007) complex model of TAW stigmatization with empirical underpinnings.https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/qualit/article/view/10380employment statusintergroup relationsskill-levelstigmatemporary agency workers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pia Cardone
Markus Tümpel
Christian M. Huber
spellingShingle Pia Cardone
Markus Tümpel
Christian M. Huber
Temporary Employment, Permanent Stigma? Perceptions of Temporary Agency Workers Across Low- and High-Skilled Jobs
Qualitative Sociology Review
employment status
intergroup relations
skill-level
stigma
temporary agency workers
author_facet Pia Cardone
Markus Tümpel
Christian M. Huber
author_sort Pia Cardone
title Temporary Employment, Permanent Stigma? Perceptions of Temporary Agency Workers Across Low- and High-Skilled Jobs
title_short Temporary Employment, Permanent Stigma? Perceptions of Temporary Agency Workers Across Low- and High-Skilled Jobs
title_full Temporary Employment, Permanent Stigma? Perceptions of Temporary Agency Workers Across Low- and High-Skilled Jobs
title_fullStr Temporary Employment, Permanent Stigma? Perceptions of Temporary Agency Workers Across Low- and High-Skilled Jobs
title_full_unstemmed Temporary Employment, Permanent Stigma? Perceptions of Temporary Agency Workers Across Low- and High-Skilled Jobs
title_sort temporary employment, permanent stigma? perceptions of temporary agency workers across low- and high-skilled jobs
publisher Lodz University Press
series Qualitative Sociology Review
issn 1733-8077
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Research on temporary agency work emphasizes that temporary agency workers (TAWs), particularly those in low-skilled jobs associated with precariousness and low social prestige, are likely to be exposed to poor treatment, as well as stigmatization. On the contrary, stigmatization of TAWs in high-skilled jobs has not been treated in much detail in previous studies. Literature provides an incomplete picture of stigmatization within the broader field of temporary employment regarding the focus on low-skilled jobs. Hence, the present qualitative study is based on data from interviews of a heterogeneous sample of TAWs employed in low- and high-skilled jobs in Germany. By using and modifying Boyce and colleagues’ (2007) model of stigmatization, the study shows that stigmatizing treatment towards TAWs occurs across all skill levels, although the intensity and form of those experiences, as well as coping strategies, differ. Thereby, this study contributes to a more differentiated and skill level-specific understanding of how TAWs perceive and cope with stigmatization linked to their employment status. It also provides an important opportunity to advance Boyce and colleagues’ (2007) complex model of TAW stigmatization with empirical underpinnings.
topic employment status
intergroup relations
skill-level
stigma
temporary agency workers
url https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/qualit/article/view/10380
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AT christianmhuber temporaryemploymentpermanentstigmaperceptionsoftemporaryagencyworkersacrosslowandhighskilledjobs
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