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The nature and prevalence of internships

In: Internships, Employability and the Search for Decent Work Experience

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  • Andrew Stewart

Abstract

This chapter outlines some of the ways in which internships can be defined, categorised and distinguished from other forms of work-based learning. It explores what is known about their prevalence, in particular from large-scale surveys in Europe and Australia. It also highlights four persistent policy concerns that emerge from the literature on internships: whether they deliver quality training; whether they provide a bridge from education to paid work, as they are often promised to do; whether unpaid or low-paid internships impede social mobility; and whether such arrangements may be displacing paid employment and undermining labour standards.

Suggested Citation

  • Andrew Stewart, 2021. "The nature and prevalence of internships," Chapters, in: Andrew Stewart & Rosemary Owens & Niall O'Higgins & Anne Hewitt (ed.), Internships, Employability and the Search for Decent Work Experience, chapter 2, pages 17-33, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:20653_2
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