the changing experience of working in the ts mc kay
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Workforce and WorkplaceThe changing experience of working in
the third sector
Katie Bruce, Susan Halford, Pauline Leonard, Stephen McKay, Domenico Moro, Rebecca Taylor
PresentationA. Methods
i. Quantitative and Qualitative elements
B. 4 themesi. Recessionii. Careers, identity, satisfactioniii. Paid and unpaid workiv. Distinctiveness/Regionality
C. Questions and discussion
Workers in the sector• Account for around 2.7% of all workers• Two thirds are women, although women
represent under half the total workforce• Almost 2 in 5 work part-time• Around 2 in 5 have degrees (average = 28%)• Clustered into particular industrial sectors• See The UK Voluntary Sector Workforce
Almanac 2011 (with NCVO and Skills Third Sector) in late October …
Changes in third sector employment 1998-2011
Under-employment and payPrivate Public Third
Wants to work more hours (%)
2008-Q2 7 8 10
2011-Q2 10 9 13
Work PT, since cannot find FT work (%)
2008-Q2 10 8 10
2011-Q2 18 12 18
Rate of gross hourly pay (median)
2008-Q2 £8.90 £11.20 £9.60
2011-Q2 £9.40 £12.50 £10.10
Change +5.3% +11.6% +5.3%
Trends in job satisfaction
A month in the life of the big society?
Working lives and careers in the third sector – Halford, Leonard and Bruce• What kinds of work are done in the third sector? • How is third sector work organized? • What work is paid and unpaid? How is the
diverse workforce managed?• What are the motivations, experiences, identities
and career trajectories of workers in the third sector?
• Six ethnographic case studies: from North East to South West England; 9 – 2,000 Paid staff; from health and social care to IT services to food waste and pop up kitchens.
• Emerging findings – – Diversity: motivations, identities, careers: does
the third sector do it differently?– The difference that place makes: how third
sector organisations are shaped by regional and local labour markets; and by social and cultural meanings of place.
Questions and discussion
1. How is the recession being experienced within organisations?
2. Are there ‘careers’ in the third sector?3. How far should TSRC be looking at unpaid
activities (volunteering)?4. Should we be looking at the role of place
to a greater extent?