Unequal opportunities: The role of internships in graduates’ labour market transitions
02 May 2019, 12:30 pm–2:00 pm

In this seminar, Dr Daria Luchinskaya presents a comparative study of the role of internships in facilitating transition to work in the UK and in Italy.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Organiser
-
Ariane De Gayardon De Fenoyl
Location
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Room 804UCL Institute of Education (IOE)20 Bedford WayLondonWC1H 0AL
Over the last few decades of expansion in higher education in Europe, young people’s education to work transitions have become more turbulent and uncertain, accentuated by the 2008 financial crisis.
While internships during undergraduate study are currently widely recognised as a way of gaining relevant work experience and as a route into employment, not everyone benefits equally, and there are differences in how internships fit into the educational and labour market context across countries.
Using two longitudinal graduate surveys, AlmaLaurea for Italy and Futuretrack for the UK, this seminar looks at graduates who completed their studies around 2009-10, just as the impact of the financial crisis started to bite, and explores their early transitions to work. It also analyses access to internships during undergraduate study and employment outcomes (getting a job, wages and perceived skills match) thereof, focusing on gender and social class, addressing the complexity around defining internships and how this varies within and across national contexts.
This comparative analysis highlights how different higher education and labour market regimes affect the role of internships in transitions to employment. The analysis further raises timely policy questions about what welfare states should do regarding inequalities in access to internships and in the graduate labour market more broadly.
Registration
This seminar is free and open for all to attend; no pre-booking required.
Links
About the Speaker
Daria Luchinskaya
Research Fellow at Institute for Employment Research, University of Warwick
Daria's research interests include graduate employment and skills utilisation. She is coordinator of an international research network on graduate transitions to employment.