Rethinking Career Studies
Facilitating Conversation across Boundaries with the Social Chronology Framework
- Authors:
- Hugh Gunz, University of Toronto
- Wolfgang Mayrhofer, Wirtschaftsuniversitat Wien, Austria
- Date Published: May 2019
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781107647428
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Careers are studied across many disciplines - particularly from the social sciences - but there is little conversation between them. Many scholars are studying the same thing in different ways, too often missing opportunities to learn from one another and draw on each other's ideas and findings to enrich their own. Gunz and Mayrhofer bridge these scholarly discourses as they explore the meaning of 'career' and answer the question: what is it that career scholars do when they study careers? The framework that emerges from this answer - the Social Chronology Framework (SCF) - vitally facilitates valuable conversations between scholars in different intellectual traditions. Building on the SCF framework, this comprehensive introduction to career studies encourages students, researchers and practitioners to identify commonalities between the topics they are studying and those examined in other fields, such as organization studies, drawing together interdisciplinary insights into career outcomes and their influencing factors.
Read more- Proposes a new approach to career scholarship that encompasses various fields and perspectives
- Introduces the Social Chronology Framework to enable readers to study the connections between different fields on the topic of careers
- Poses new questions regarding careers in the organizational and managerial fields
Reviews & endorsements
'In this authoritative book, Gunz and Mayrhofer demonstrate an inspiring width of vision and depth of analysis that will benefit career studies enormously. Their ability to identify and explain abstract concepts and then apply them rigourously to specific examples of career research is truly impressive. This book deserves to be a landmark in career studies and beyond – at last we have something that achieves what many of us careers academics have been calling for but have not delivered. The Social Chronology Framework deserves to become a key reference point for careers researchers in designing and interpreting their work, and in incorporating new ideas into their thinking.' John Arnold, Loughborough University
See more reviews'This book ought to be read by every scholar who studies careers​. ​It is a demanding book, but the deeper you go the more you will be rewarded. The authors carefully sequenced propositions, models and illustrative examples promote a rich appreciation of how career scholars can integrate and gain greater respect for one another's work. Moreover, ​the book provides a point of departure for conversations​ with scholars who study other topics​ - ​such as identity, role and leadership​ - which can also benefit from an interdisciplinary approach. We need more books like this if social science is ever going to fulfill its ​​​potential.' Michael B. Arthur, Emeritus Professor, Suffolk University, Boston
'HG and WM, as they call themselves in this book, offer us a historical and a sometimes detailed/sometimes witty perspective of careers scientific field studies, searching for better definitions, mapping connections between theories and presenting SCF as a device for tackling careers studies.' Tania Casado, Universidade de SĂŁo Paulo
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×Product details
- Date Published: May 2019
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781107647428
- length: 321 pages
- dimensions: 230 x 153 x 15 mm
- weight: 0.46kg
- contains: 23 b/w illus.
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
Figures
Tables
Preface
Part I. Point of Departure:
1. Establishing the need for the Social Chronology Framework
2. Exploring career as a concept
Part II. The Social Chronology Framework (SCF):
3. The three perspectives and their view of career
4. A heuristic model of career
5. Exploring the architectonics of the SCF
Part III. Putting the SCF to work:
6. Facilitating conversations within career studies
7. Stimulating cumulative research within career studies
8. Bringing ideas in from organization studies
9. Contributing to organization studies
Part IV. Conclusion:
10. Taking the SCF forward
References.
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