Blue Collar
(adjective)
Describes working-class occupations, especially those involving manual labor.
Examples of Blue Collar in the following topics:
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Industrial Work
- In common parlance, these people are often referred to as blue-collar workers.
- Often, blue-collar workers physically build or maintain something .
- The term "blue collar" refers to the type of clothing often worn by industrial workers.
- Some blue-collar workers have uniforms embroidered with either the business' name or the individual's name.
- This clip from CNN shows the development of a new type of blue-collar worker in South Carolina.
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Modern Management
- Career tracks were offered to skilled blue collar jobs and white collar managers, starting in railroads and expanding into finance, manufacturing, and trade.
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The Working Class
- Those in the working class are commonly employed in low-skilled occupations, including clerical and retail positions and blue collar or manual labor occupations.
- Low-level, white-collar employees are sometimes included in this class, such as secretaries and call center employees.
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Job Discrimination
- This explanation of the pay gap invokes the notion of the pink-collar worker.
- A pink-collar worker is a term for designating the types of jobs in the service industry that are considered to be stereotypically female, such as working as a waitress, nurse, teacher or secretary.
- The term attempts to distinguish this type of work from blue-collar and white-collar work.
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Inequalities of Work
- This explanation of the pay gap invokes the notion of the pink-collar worker.
- A "pink-collar worker" is a term for designating the types of jobs in the service industry that are considered to be stereotypically female, such as working as a waitress, nurse, teacher, or secretary.
- The term attempts to distinguish this type of work from blue-collar and white-collar work.
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The Postwar Economy: 1945-1960
- And by 1956, a majority of U.S. workers held white-collar rather than blue-collar jobs.
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Introduction to Labor in America: The Worker's Role
- More and more workers hold white-collar office jobs rather than unskilled, blue-collar factory jobs.
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White-Collar Crime
- White-collar crime is a financially motivated, nonviolent crime committed for illegal monetary gain.
- White-collar crime is a financially motivated, nonviolent crime committed for illegal monetary gain.
- White-collar crime, is similar to corporate crime, because white-collar employees are more likely to commit fraud, bribery, ponzi schemes, insider trading, embezzlement, cyber crime, copyright infringement, money laundering, identity theft, and forgery .
- The term "white-collar crime" was coined in 1939 by Edwin Sutherland, who defined it as a "crime committed by a person of respectability and high social status in the course of his occupation" in a speech entitled "The White Collar Criminal" delivered to the American Sociological Society.
- Much of Sutherland's work was to separate and define the differences in blue-collar street crimes such as arson, burglary, theft, assault, rape, and vandalism, which are often blamed on psychological, associational, and structural factors.
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The Post-War Boom
- By 1960, blue-collar workers had become the biggest buyers of many luxury goods and services.
- In regards to social welfare, the postwar era saw a considerable improvement in insurance for workers and their dependents against the risks of illness, as private insurance programs like Blue Cross and Blue Shield expanded.
- Many blue-collar workers continued to live in poverty, with 30% of those employed in industry.
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Industrial Conflict
- Braverman demonstrated several mechanisms of control in both the factory blue collar and clerical white collar labor force.