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Social-Contextual Career Development
1966 - 1972
Career decisions were increasingly understood as shaped by social context and comparative standings rather than solely by individual traits. Relative deprivation, social comparison, and family dynamics emerged as key drivers, with growing attention to role models and gendered pathways in career development. The era also introduced early vocational classifications and guidance models that anticipated planning for two-career households, reflecting shifting work–family expectations and policy relevance.
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Social-Cognitive Career Foundations
1973 - 1990
Adaptive Boundaryless Career
1991 - 1997
Boundaryless Contextual Career Development
1998 - 2004
Life-Design Career Construction
2005 - 2009
Career Adaptability in STEM
2010 - 2016
Graduate Capital Framework
2017 - 2023