Word of the Day: Precariat

Via Wordspy, we learn today’s new phrase:

precariat
n. People whose lives are precarious because they have little or no job security. [Precarious + proletariat.]

Example Citations:

This is echoed by the handful of other academics who are dipping their toes into the murky psychological depths where liberal values and baser instincts collide. The economist Professor Guy Standing, for example, who has charted the slide away from altruism and tolerance among that large group of stressed, job-insecure Britons he dubs the “precariat“.

—Bill Tuckey, “Liberals: The secret elitists,” The Independent, December 13, 2010
Britain is not far behind, with a raft of newly minted “teaching fellowships” and the proliferation of short-term, part-time teaching positions, contracted on an hourly paid basis, in which PhD students or new postdocs are charged with delivering mass undergraduate programmes, with little training, inadequate support and rates of pay that can make cleaning and catering work seem like attractive options. Young and “early career” academics (a designation that can nowadays last across one’s entire career) may become emblematic of the newly emerging global “precariat” that Ross discusses.
—Rosalind Gill, “Employment, but without benefits,” The Times Higher Education Supplement, March 4, 2010

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

What's been said:

Discussions found on the web:

Posted Under

Uncategorized