Tertiarization in Chile: cultural inequality and occupational structure

cepal.articleNo10
cepal.bibLevelSección o Parte de un Documento
cepal.callNumberLC/G.2683-P
cepal.docTypeRevistas
cepal.jelCodeA14
cepal.jelCodeY80
cepal.jelCodeZ19
cepal.jobNumberRVI119_Gayo
cepal.physicalDescriptiongráficos., tablas.
cepal.regionalOfficeSantiago
cepal.sdg1
cepal.sdg8
cepal.sdg10
cepal.topicEngEMPLOYMENT
cepal.topicEngSOCIAL COHESION
cepal.topicSpaCOHESIÓN SOCIAL
cepal.topicSpaEMPLEO
cepal.workareaEngECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
cepal.workareaEngPRODUCTION, PRODUCTIVITY AND MANAGEMENT
cepal.workareaEngSOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
cepal.workareaSpaDESARROLLO ECONÓMICO
cepal.workareaSpaDESARROLLO PRODUCTIVO Y EMPRESARIAL
cepal.workareaSpaDESARROLLO SOCIAL
dc.contributor.authorGayo, Modesto
dc.contributor.authorMéndez, María Luisa
dc.contributor.authorTeitelboim, Berta
dc.coverage.spatialEngCHILE
dc.coverage.spatialSpaCHILE
dc.date.accessioned2016-12-06T14:40:59Z
dc.date.available2016-12-06T14:40:59Z
dc.date.issued2016-08
dc.description.abstractTertiarization, or the shift to service economies with an increasing prevalence of non-manual occupations, has been identified as a central phenomenon in contemporary societies. With the purported numerical and political decline of traditional working-class sectors, the middle class has come to be seen in recent decades as the dominant one. This understanding of the way society has evolved has gone along with a growing interest in forms of social differentiation other than the occupational one of industrial societies, including cultural differentiation. This paper briefly reconstructs the debate and shows that while there may have been growth in non-manual occupations, prompting the notion of a progressive shift towards a middle-class society, some important findings make it difficult simply to accept the claim that Chile has become this kind of mesocratic society.
dc.formatTexto
dc.format.extentpáginas. 175-19
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.unSymbolLC/G.2683-P
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11362/40786
dc.language.isoeng
dc.physicalDescriptionp. 175-194; grafs., tabls.
dc.relation.isPartOfCEPAL Review
dc.relation.isPartOfNo119
dc.relation.isPartOfSeriesCEPAL Review
dc.relation.translationLanguagespa
dc.relation.translationRecordLa terciarización en Chile. Desigualdad cultural y estructura ocupacional
dc.relation.translationUrihttps://hdl.handle.net/11362/40400
dc.rights.coarDisponible
dc.subject.unbisEngEMPLOYMENT
dc.subject.unbisEngSERVICE INDUSTRIES
dc.subject.unbisEngCULTURAL ASPECTS
dc.subject.unbisEngMIDDLE CLASS
dc.subject.unbisEngCULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
dc.subject.unbisEngEQUALITY
dc.subject.unbisSpaEMPLEO
dc.subject.unbisSpaSECTOR TERCIARIO
dc.subject.unbisSpaASPECTOS CULTURALES
dc.subject.unbisSpaCLASE MEDIA
dc.subject.unbisSpaDESARROLLO CULTURAL
dc.subject.unbisSpaIGUALDAD
dc.titleTertiarization in Chile: cultural inequality and occupational structure
dc.type.coarrevista
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