HUD and PD&R Periodicals
 
My Cart   |  HUD Home  |  HUD USER Home
Search   Advanced Search
 
First time visitor
Contact Us
FAQ
 
 
Series of images depicting different types of housing.
An animated link to the Map gallery


Firstgov logo



 
Start of Main Content

space
The Work of Cities: Underemployment and Urban Change in Late-20th-Century America
James R. Elliott
Sociology Department
Tulane University

This research moves beyond preoccupations with deindustrialization, joblessness, and the urban “underclass” to examine the role that cities and urbanization in general have played in the reorganization of production and local labor markets. After reviewing recent work on global cities, new industrial districts, and the “new” social division of labor, the author used Census data to examine the extent and relative causes of rising underemployment in U.S. metropolitan areas during 1950–90. Several key findings emerge. First, underemployment increased 35 percent between 1970 and 1990, largely due to shifts in structural rather than personal factors. Second, most of this structural shift occurred within industries, not across them. Third, the consequences of these shifts have been most dramatic at the bottom rather than the top of the urban hierarchy, despite recent claims regarding global cities. Fourth, factors associated with the new social division of labor characterized by growing numbers of smaller workplaces and “routine” business service firms offer the strongest empirical explanation for rising underemployment in local metropolitan areas. Implications are discussed.

The Work of Cities: Underemployment and Urban Change in Late-20th-Century America

 

spacer

Content updated on 03/31/05   Back to Top Back to Top
 If you do not have the Adobe Acrobat Reader program already installed on your computer to view PDF files, CLICK HERE to download the free reader.
HUD logo HUD USER, P.O. Box 23268, Washington, DC 20026-3268
Toll Free: 1-800-245-2691 TDD: 1-800-927-7589
Local: 1-202-708-3178 Fax: 1-202-708-9981
Home Icon
HUD USER Home
Privacy Statement