Occupation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Look up occupation in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Occupation may refer to:
In business:
- Employment, a person's job or work in service of an employer
- Profession, an occupation requiring specialized knowledge
- Vocation, an occupation pursued more for altruistic benefit rather than for income
- Career, a person's occupational history
- Day job, an occupation solely for income, while pursuing another preferred career track
- List of occupations
- Standard Occupational Classification System, developed and used by the U.S. government
- Occupational prestige, the relative esteem in which a particular job is held
- Occupational therapy, assisting people who have difficulty performing occupational functions
- Occupational science, the study of humans as occupational beings
- Occupational disease, chronic ailment resulting from work
- Occupational crime, opportunistically committed in the course of legal occupation
In a military context:
- Military occupation, control of a territory by a military force
- Law of occupation, portions of the law of war which relate to military occupation
- List of military occupations, notable historical instances of military occupation
In film and television:
- Occupation 101, a 2006 documentary film about the Israeli–Palestinian conflict
- Occupation: Dreamland, a 2006 documentary film about the Iraq War
- Occupation (TV serial), a 2009 television serial about the Iraq War
- Occupation Double, a Canadian reality television show
- "Occupation" (Battlestar Galactica), an episode in the third season
In music:
- Occupation: Foole, a comedy album by George Carlin
- "The Beautiful Occupation", a song by the band, Travis
Other meanings:
- Occupation (protest), the temporary forceful occupation of a building, space or symbolic site
- Occupancy, use of a building for shelter or support of persons, animals, or property
| This page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. |
Categories: Disambiguation pages
