Hierarchy view
ESCOpedia
The occupations pillar is one of the two pillars of ESCO. It organises the occupation concepts. It uses hierarchical relationships between them, metadata as well as mappings to the International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO) in order to structure the occupations.
Content
- 1. Occupational profiles
- 2. Structure of the occupation pillars
- 3. Additional documentation
1. Occupational profiles
ESCO v1 contains 2 942 occupations. Each occupation concept contains one preferred term and any number of non-preferred terms and hidden terms in each of the ESCO languages. It also includes information on regulated professions that are relevant in the context of this occupation.
Each occupation also comes with an occupational profile. The profiles contain an explanation of the occupation in the form of description, scope note and definition. Furthermore, they list the knowledge, skills and competences that experts considered relevant terminology for this occupation on a European scale. ESCO distinguishes essential and optional knowledge, skills and competences.
The following list provides an overview of the metadata for ESCO occupations and relationships to other ESCO pillars:
- Preferred term
- Non-preferred terms
- Hidden terms
- Description
- Formal definition
- Scope note
- Information on regulation
- ISCO-08 code
- Essential skills and competences
- Optional skills and competences
- Essential knowledge
- Optional knowledge
- URI
2. Structure of the occupation pillar
The International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO-08) serves as the hierarchical structure for the occupations pillar. Each ESCO occupations is assigned to exactly one ISCO-08 unit group (level 4). Thus, ISCO-08 provides the top four levels for the occupations pillar. ESCO provides the fifth and lower levels of the hierarchical structure with its list of occupations.
Occupation hierarchy in ESCO using ISCO-08
In addition, ESCO contains hierarchical relationships between ESCO occupations. This way, ESCO shows that specialisms are narrower in scope than a more generic occupation. For example, ESCO contains an occupation "bartender" and two specialisms "cocktail bartender" and "barista", which are hierarchically linked to it.
3. Additional documentation
For further insights please refer to the following link: International Labour Organisation: ISCO website