Using working patterns as a basis for differentiating part-time employment
Abstract
Seeking to determine which working patterns have a specific effect on part-time work, in 1998-99 France's INSEE statistical agency carried out a Timetable survey that questioned the homogeneity of this form of employment (again in terms of the working patterns upon which it is based). A neuronal method was used to classify an entire sample of part-time employees according to their weekly working patterns -the end result being that part-time work was shown to be a very heterogeneous form of employment. This was not only reflected by the existence of many different groups of part-time employees, each with highly differentiated individual and professional characteristics, but also (and above all) by the diversity of their weekly working patterns.
Cite
@article{arxiv.math/0611413,
title = {Using working patterns as a basis for differentiating part-time employment},
author = {Patrick Letrémy and Christèle Meilland and Marie Cottrell},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:math/0611413},
year = {2016}
}
Comments
ACSEG 2002, publi\'{e} EJESS