Benchmarking Carrots and Sticks: Developing a Model for the Evaluation of Work-Based Employment Programs
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Castonguay, Julie (Author)
Title
Benchmarking Carrots and Sticks: Developing a Model for the Evaluation of Work-Based Employment Programs
Abstract
Social benchmarking is an evaluation method in which the performance levels of different public social programs are compared, either relatively to each other or to an absolute value. The first part of this research discusses the use of social benchmarking for the evaluation of active labour market policies. This part also develops a social benchmark model, which can be used to assess the performance of active labour market policies in general, and work-based employment programs in specific. The second part of this research consists of the actual benchmarking of the work-based employment programs in five countries: Australia, Canada, the Netherlands, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.
Type
Ph.D.
University
Hugo Sinzheimer Institute, University of Amsterdam
Place
Amsterdam
Date
2009
# of Pages
388 pages
Language
English
Short Title
Benchmarking Carrots and Sticks
Citation
Castonguay, J. (2009). Benchmarking Carrots and Sticks: Developing a Model for the Evaluation of Work-Based Employment Programs [Ph.D., Hugo Sinzheimer Institute, University of Amsterdam]. http://hdl.handle.net/11245/1.317614
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