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Journal of Economic Geography Advance Access originally published online on July 17, 2008
Journal of Economic Geography 2009 9(1):55-84; doi:10.1093/jeg/lbn029
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© The Author (2008). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Agents of casualization? The temporary staffing industry and labour market restructuring in Australia

Neil M. Coe*, Jennifer Johns** and Kevin Ward*

*Geography, School of Environment and Development, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK.
**Department of Geography, University of Liverpool, Roxby Building, Liverpool, L69 7ZT, UK.

email <neil.coe{at}manchester.ac.uk>

JEL classifications: F23, L2, L8, M51

This article presents a study of the Australian temporary staffing industry. It explores how temporary staffing markets are manufactured through the interactions between industrial relations and regulatory systems, on the one hand, and the structures and strategies of domestic and transnational temporary staffing agencies on the other. The article draws on secondary datasets and semi-structured interviews with government departments, labour unions, staffing agencies and their trade bodies to analyse the size, structure and characteristics of the Australian temporary staffing market. It argues that the Australian market differs in important ways from those other ‘neoliberal’ labour market regimes—such as those in Canada, UK and USA—with which it is often compared. The article argues for an approach that seeks to explore the (often gradual) mutual transformation of temporary staffing organizations and the institutional and regulatory systems in which they are embedded, rather than privileging one at the expense of the other.

Keywords: temporary staffing, Australia, labour markets, industrial relations, internationalization
Date submitted: 17 August 2007     Date accepted: 19 June 2008


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