Global shifts to a knowledge based economy have led to the
semi-proletarianization of labour and the emergence of a transnational
precariat class. It has allowed for the propaganda of the emancipation
of labour by way of membership in the creatives club. Workers and the
rising unemployed are increasingly expected to become self-managing
lifelong learners due to the impact of technological development. Dr.
Moore conducts a critical investigation of how employment and education
policy in three different locations is informed by a dominant view of
what should make a person 'employable', created by the elite, and then
looks for new models for post-capitalist production such as peer to peer
communities that can overcome this binding set of rules. The
International Political Economy of Work will provide the basis for
research into the dramatic impact of global instability on workers such
as is seen in the context of the recent recession.