Job by distribution
Job by distribution was a Soviet practice of obligatory job placement for college graduates. After graduation, a person would be "distributed" by a committee to a particular position anywhere within the Soviet Union, and had an obligation to work there, typically for three years.
During that time, an employee had the special status of a "young specialist": he or she could not be fired, and could get special benefits like housing. After the placement term expiration, the employee could continue to work there or leave for another job. The practice guaranteed jobs to new graduates, but was generally disliked because of unpredictable, arbitrary, and sometimes personal nature of committee decisions, and was abandoned by the mid-1990s.
But it still exist in Belarus.