The Proletarianization of Palestinians in Israel (ص 492)

غرض

عنوان
The Proletarianization of Palestinians in Israel (ص 492)
المحتوى
493
rangements individually and in relation to the whole. This way, to spe-
cify the content of our "model" of the segmentation of the proletariat on
levels deeper than mere labor-market segmentations. Once we disaggregate
Chart I into its five components and their theoretical rationale, we will
expose the concrete background observations that led into identifying this
structure as a whole. It is not the individual hierarchies, but rather
the horizontal interlocking relationships between their various levels
that are most revealing of the nature of working class segmentation, as will
be demonstrated.
A. The Occupational Hierarchy
In the previous chapter, we identified the differential locations of
the various segments of the labor force in the occupational structure of
employment. In the present analysis, we focus only on differentiations
among those workers who perform manual productive, non-supervisory labor
categories. They seem to rank hierarchically according to the level of
skill and/or investment in human capital. This criterion can be measured
quantitatively in terms of years of schooling and/or on-the-job-training
(the socially-necessary labor time to produce the particular labor commod-
ity).
In terms of years of schooling, evidence from Annual Reports of the
Employment Service (1964) indicates that Sabras have historically consti-
tuted the smallest portion of Jewish unskilled work-seekers. Then come
European-American immigrants, and the highest representation is among
Oriental-Jews. Evidence, however, shows also that over time the size of
unskilled work-seekers among European-American immigrants tends to de-
crease, and among Sabras to increase, and among Orientals to stay the same.
تاريخ
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المنشئ
Najwa Hanna Makhoul

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