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Patrick Emmenegger
Title
Prof. Dr.
Last Name
Emmenegger
First name
Patrick
Email
patrick.emmenegger@unisg.ch
Phone
+41 71 224 2332
Homepage
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1 - 10 of 12
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PublicationSocial partner involvement in collective skill formation governance. A comparison of Austria, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and Switzerland( 2020-02-12)Dual vocational education and training (VET) with social partner involvement in its governance can typically be found in collective skill formation systems. This article reviews the diversity of collective skill formation systems with a particular focus on their systemic governance. In particular, we look at the actors involved as well as how the systemic governance is organised in terms of corporatist decision-making bodies. The article shows that there are important cross-national differences. First, the social partners do not always participate in the decision-making at the political-strategic level. Second, social partner involvement is not always on equal terms (parity), with trade unions in some cases being less strongly involved. Third, differences in VET governance are particularly pronounced at the technical-operational level. Empirically, the article focuses on the five prototypical collective skill formation systems Austria, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and Switzerland.Type: journal articleJournal: Transfer: European Review of Labour and ResearchVolume: 26Issue: 1
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PublicationCollective Action, Business Cleavages and the Politics of Control: Segmentalism in the Swiss Skill Formation System( 2019)Type: journal articleJournal: British Journal of Industrial RelationsVolume: 57Issue: 3
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PublicationExpertenbericht zur systemischen Steuerung der Berufsbildung in der Schweiz(Schweizerisches Staatssekretariat für Bildung, Forschung und Innovation, 2019-02)Type: journal article
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PublicationHow Agents Change Institutions: Coalitional Dynamics and the Reform of Commercial Training in SwitzerlandHistorical institutionalist research has long struggled to come to terms with agency. Yet injecting agency into historical-institutionalist accounts is no easy task. If institutions are structuring agents’ actions, while they are simultaneously being structured by these very agents’ behavior, the ontological status of institutions remains unclear. Hence, most historical-institutional accounts, at the conceptual level, tend to downplay the role of agency. However, in this way, they also remain incomplete. Following the “coalitional turn” in historical institutionalism, we develop a new account of institutional change and stability that awards a central role to agency. At the heart of our approach is the notion that both stability and change in institutions presuppose constant coalition building by organized entrepreneurial actors. However, for several reasons, such coalition building is complicated, which ultimately leads to institutional stability. In addition, we argue that relevant state agencies actively shape whether the incumbent coalition or the challenger coalition prevails. We illustrate the potential of our actor-centered approach to institutional change by analyzing the reform of commercial training in Switzerland, tracing developments from the beginning of the 1980s until today.Type: journal articleJournal: Business and politics : B&PVolume: 21Issue: 2
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PublicationCollective Skill Formation Systems and the Knowledge Economy: Varieties of Going Upskill( 2021-07-02)Type: conference paper
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PublicationHow Agents Change Institutions: Institutional Entrepreneurs and the Reform of Commercial Training in Switzerland( 2018-02-06)Type: conference contribution
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PublicationCollective Action, Business Cleavages and the Politics of Segmentalism: The Reform of Commercial Training in Switzerland( 2017-06-30)Type: conference contribution