Precarious Work, "Harmonizing down" and Economic Anxiety: Implications for Citizenship and Society

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Precarious Work, "Harmonizing down" and Economic Anxiety: Implications for Citizenship and Society
Abstract
This paper examines precarious work, its historical origins and certain social consequences. I use the 2015 Canadian Election Study to analyze the relationship between work-related insecurity and economic anxiety with voting, non-voting political behaviour and attitudes toward equity-seeking groups. I propose a theory of "harmonizing down", in which workers who were once able to access the benefits and status of the standard employment relationship have generally seen their opportunities for stable and secure work decline. This has resulted in economic anxiety for most workers. Results were mixed, suggesting that broad generalizations around economic anxiety are problematic. Insecurity and anxiety may reduce the likelihood of voting but may increase non-voting participation. Some aspects of insecurity and anxiety were related to negative attitudes toward equity-seeking groups, but the relationship is not clear. Gender and political party identity influence these attitudes.
Type
M.A., Political Economy
University
Carleton University
Place
Ottawa
Date
2019
# of Pages
247 pages
Language
English
Short Title
Precarious Work, "Harmonizing down" and Economic Anxiety
Accessed
10/13/21, 5:12 PM
Library Catalog
curve.carleton.ca
Extra
Last Modified: 2020-02-20T11:13-05:00
Citation
McKnight, Z. A. (2019). Precarious Work, “Harmonizing down” and Economic Anxiety: Implications for Citizenship and Society [M.A., Political Economy, Carleton University]. https://repository.library.carleton.ca/concern/etds/b5644s57f