dequalification
Definitions
noun
A change so as to require less skill and knowledge, often leading to less responsibility and control.
Middle management is particularly threatened with dequalification (reduction in decision-making, supervision and control) .
According to Braverman's thesis, Taylorism, or scientific management, has been the key feature in the devaluation and dequalification of work.
The process by which someone is forced to work below the level of their skills and qualifications.
Along the same lines, it appears that by accepting some degree of occupational dequalification in relation to real educational level, and a more or less precarious situation, most young people managed to find work after leaving school, although for the most part by themselves, the ANPE having little effect and then only in cases of particular difficulty.
Dequalification is an imposed status, hitting women hardest in fields historically dominated by men, e.g., medicine and engineering.
The change in status from qualifying (for something) to not qualifying.
Thus, it is impossible to create any objective standard as to what particular conditions would justify dequalification of the HMO.
If the “fiscal requirement” were left open as to content, it would require Fund negotiation ("conditionality" ) of precisely the type that the major rejects — as well as the strong likelihood of periodic dequalifications and requalifications of countries that would be immensely destabilizing.
The removal of distinctions; homogenization
This 'dequalification', which is equivalent to a loss of memory, is also a cultural process.
For Guattari this democratization is fundamentally capitalist because the systematic dequalification of expression, and its sectorization and bipolarization of values in capitalism, treats everything as formally equal and so 'puts differential qualities and non-discursive intensities under the exclusive control of binary and linear relations.'