Content
November 2019, Volume 25, Issue 4
- 401-402 Editorial
by Jens Lind - 403-404 Éditorial
by Jens Lind - 405-406 Editorial
by Jens Lind - 407-420 Post-crisis labour market outcomes in worlds of welfare and varieties of capitalism
by Mohammad Ferdosi - 421-435 Spanish trade unions against labour market reforms: strategic choices and outcomes
by Pablo del Rio Loira & Menno Fenger - 437-450 Trade union representatives from ethnic minorities. Representation revisited
by Inger Marie Hagen & Ragnhild Steen Jensen - 451-464 The influence of collective employment relations on work accommodation: case studies in Estonia, Hungary and Poland
by Märt Masso & Deborah Foster & Liina Osila & Balázs Bábel & Jan Czarzasty & Ambrus Kiss & Małgorzata Koziarek & Dominik Owczarek - 465-481 Algorithms, artificial intelligence and automated decisions concerning workers and the risks of discrimination: the necessary collective governance of data protection
by Adrián TodolÃ-Signes - 483-485 Book Review: Reducing Inequalities in Europe
by Martin Myant - 485-487 Book Review: Why not Default? The Political Economy of Sovereign Debt
by David Hollanders - 489-493 A Fairer Europe for Workers…Or Else? Some observations from the ETUC Congress 2019, Vienna, 21–24 May 2019
by Darragh Golden
August 2019, Volume 25, Issue 3
- 255-257 Editorial
by Torsten Müller & Thorsten Schulten - 258-261 Éditorial
by Torsten Müller & Thorsten Schulten - 262-265 Editorial
by Torsten Müller & Thorsten Schulten - 267-284 What’s in a name? From minimum wages to living wages in Europe
by Thorsten Schulten & Torsten Müller - 285-299 Living wages in international and European law
by Reingard Zimmer - 301-317 The calculation of a living wage: the UK’s experience
by Conor D’Arcy & David Finch - 319-333 The Living Wage in the UK: testing the limits of soft regulation?
by Mathew Johnson & Aristea Koukiadaki & Damian Grimshaw - 335-350 The introduction of a ‘monthly living wage’ in Slovenia
by Andreja Poje - 351-365 Collective bargaining as a tool to ensure a living wage. Experiences from the Nordic countries
by Kristin Alsos & Kristine Nergaard & Andreas Van Den Heuvel - 367-372 Trade unions and the Living Wage in the UK
by Paul John Sellers - 373-379 Living wages: a reasonable goal or a surrender of minimum wages? An Austrian perspective
by Julia Hofmann & Sepp Zuckerstätter - 381-386 ‘Fight for 14’. The campaign for a decent minimum wage of €14 per hour in Belgium
by Olivier Flohimont - 387-391 Barcelona’s minimum living wage initiative
by Bru LaÃn & LluÃs Torrens - 393-395 IG Metall: in the vanguard of transformation
by Otto Jacobi - 397-398 Book Review: Globalisation under and after socialism: the evolution of transnational capital in Central and Eastern Europe
by Abhishek
May 2019, Volume 25, Issue 2
- 139-141 Editorial
by Maria Jepsen - 142-144 Éditorial
by Maria Jepsen - 145-147 Editorial
by Maria Jepsen - 149-163 Reviewing the 2018 OECD Jobs Strategy – anything new under the sun?
by Stephen McBride & James Watson - 165-180 Job quality in European employment policy: one step forward, two steps back?
by Agnieszka Piasna & Brendan Burchell & Kirsten Sehnbruch - 181-203 International organisations and the role of collective bargaining
by Roberto Pedersini - 205-219 Ensuring universal social protection for the future of work
by Christina Behrendt & Quynh Anh Nguyen - 221-227 The revised OECD Jobs Strategy and labour market flexibility: a double-handed narrative
by Ronald Janssen - 229-234 The creation and future of the new Danish trade union confederation
by Søren Kaj Andersen & Nana Wesley Hansen - 235-242 Digitalisation, work environment and personal integrity at work
by Anna Spånt Enbuske - 243-245 Book Review: The Value of Everything: Making and Taking in the Global Economy
by Martin Myant - 245-247 Book Review: The European Social Dialogue in Perspective: Its Future Potential as an Autopoietic System and Lessons from the Global Maritime System of Industrial Relations
by John Paterson - 247-248 Løsarbeidersamfunnet [Society of the casual worker]
by Jonas Bals - 248-251 The defeat of solidarity: anger and politics in postcommunist Europe
by Collin Covington
February 2019, Volume 25, Issue 1
- 3-5 Editorial
by Johanna K Schenner & Anders Neergaard - 6-8 Éditorial
by Johanna K Schenner & Anders Neergaard - 9-12 Editorial
by Johanna K Schenner & Anders Neergaard - 13-24 Asylum-seekers and refugees within Europe and labour market integration
by Johanna K Schenner & Anders Neergaard - 25-42 Refugee integration policy the Norwegian way – why good ideas fail and bad ideas prevail
by Anne Britt Djuve & Hanne Cecilie Kavli - 43-62 Initial employment pathways of immigrants in Germany. Why legal contexts of reception matter – an analysis of life-course data
by Janina Söhn - 63-80 Problematising refugee migrants in the Swedish forestry sector
by Eva Wikström & Anna Sténs - 81-99 Asylum-seekers and the ‘hyper-precarity trap’ in Austria, Finland and Italy
by Johanna K Schenner & Paola Cavanna & Natalia Ollus - 101-112 What issues do refugees face in integrating into labour markets? Evidence from Slovenia
by Brigita VonÄ ina & Nina Marin - 113-119 Integration of beneficiaries of international protection in the Lithuanian labour market: policies and practices
by Giedrė Blažytė & Karolis Žibas - 121-129 The role of the EU in integrating asylum-seekers and refugees: limitations and opportunities
by Klára Fóti - 131-132 Book Review: Trade Unions and Migrant Workers: New Contexts and Challenges in Europe
by Clara Turner - 133-135 Book Review: Reconstructing Solidarity. Labour Unions, Precarious Work, and the Politics of Institutional Change in Europe
by Teresa Cappiali
November 2018, Volume 24, Issue 4
- 363-366 Editorial
by Jean-Yves Boulin - 367-370 Éditorial
by Jean-Yves Boulin - 371-374 Editorial
by Jean-Yves Boulin - 375-386 Farewell flexicurity? Danish flexicurity and the crisis
by Thomas Bredgaard & Per Kongshøj Madsen - 387-404 Flexicurity and the dynamics of the welfare state adjustments
by Oldrich Bubak - 405-419 Self-employed professionals in the European labour market. A comparison between Italy, Germany and the UK
by Paolo Borghi & Anna Mori & Renata Semenza - 421-436 Organising and mobilising Central and Eastern European migrant women working in care. A case study of a successful care workers’ strike in Switzerland in 2014
by Adam Rogalewski - 437-450 Professional unions in Germany: theoretical explanations and practical consequences for industrial relations
by Berndt Keller - 451-465 Contested industrial democracy discourses in transnational companies. The case of the ArcelorMittal European Social Dialogue Group
by Sergio González Begega & Holm-Detlev Köhler & Mona Aranea - 467-486 High-involvement management practices, job control, and employee well-being in the public and private sectors. Evidence from Finland
by Laura Peutere & Antti Saloniemi & Simo Aho & Jouko Nätti & Tapio Nummi - 487-490 Judgment designating Deliveroo ‘rider’ an employee and analysis of its impact on the ‘gig economy’
by Adrián TodolÃ-Signes - 491-492 Book Review: Experimental Politics. Work, Welfare, and Creativity in the Neoliberal Age
by David Hollanders
August 2018, Volume 24, Issue 3
- 251-253 Editorial
by Jean-Yves Boulin & Donna Kesselman - 254-256 Éditorial
by Jean-Yves Boulin & Donna Kesselman - 257-259 Editorial
by Jean-Yves Boulin & Donna Kesselman - 261-277 Institutional change and transformations in labour and employment standards
by Marie-Christine Bureau & Patrick Dieuaide - 279-295 Collective actions on the margins of the salariat
by Marie-Christine Bureau & Antonella Corsani - 297-315 Grey zones and triangulation of the employment relationship in globalisation
by Patrick Dieuaide - 317-336 The grey zone and labour market dynamics in Germany
by Olivier Giraud & Arnaud Lechevalier - 337-352 Labour, self-entrepreneurship in Brazil and paradoxes of social freedom
by Cinara L Rosenfield - 353-356 Book Review: The Uses of Social Investment
by Vera Šćepanović - 356-359 Book Review: Firms as Political Entities. Saving Democracy through Economic Bicameralism
by Sara Lafuente Hernández
May 2018, Volume 24, Issue 2
- 127-129 Editorial
by Béla Greskovits & Jeremy Waddington - 130-132 Editorial
by Béla Greskovits & Jeremy Waddington - 133-135 Editorial
by Béla Greskovits & Jeremy Waddington - 137-149 Trade unions in a changing political context
by Lars Magnusson - 151-162 Towards a theory of illiberal dualisation? Conceptualising new employment and social policy divisions in Poland and the United Kingdom
by Thomas Prosser & Giga Giorgadze - 163-178 Trade unions and the sovereign power of the state. A comparative analysis of employer offensives in the Danish and Irish public sectors
by Imre Szabó - 179-193 French trade unions and the mobilisation against the El Khomri law in 2016: a reconfiguration of strategies and alliances
by Sophie Béroud - 195-215 Social protests, discontent and politics in southern and eastern Europe
by Maria da Paz Campos Lima & Antonio MartÃn Artiles - 217-232 Direct democracy and trade union action
by Roland Erne & Markus Blaser - 233-236 ‘Do you believe in life after work?’ The University and College Union strike in Britain
by Mark Bergfeld - 237-247 Labour politics and the EU’s new economic governance regime (European Unions)
by Roland Erne
February 2018, Volume 24, Issue 1
- 3-4 Editorial
by Anne Skevik Grødem & Anniken Hagelund & Jon M Hippe & Christine Trampusch - 5-6 Editorial
by Anne Skevik Grødem & Anniken Hagelund & Jon M Hippe & Christine Trampusch - 7-8 Editorial
by Anne Skevik Grødem & Anniken Hagelund & Jon M Hippe & Christine Trampusch - 9-23 Beyond coverage: the politics of occupational pensions and the role of trade unions. Introduction to special issue
by Anne Skevik Grødem & Anniken Hagelund & Jon M Hippe & Christine Trampusch - 25-41 Individualisation reversed: the cross-class politics of social regulation in the UK’s public/private pension mix
by Paul Bridgen & Traute Meyer - 43-56 The corrosion of occupational pensions solidarity in the Netherlands
by Johan De Deken - 57-71 The development of private pensions in Serbia: caught between a generic blueprint and an unconducive local environment
by Nikola Altiparmakov & Gordana Matković - 73-89 Pension multi-pillarisation in Italy: actors, ‘institutional gates’ and the ‘new politics’ of funded pensions
by Matteo Jessoula - 91-107 Divergent occupational pensions in Bismarckian countries: the case of Germany and Austria
by Tobias Wiß - 109-122 Trade unions and the politics of occupational pensions in Denmark and Norway
by Axel West Pedersen & Jon M Hippe & Anne Skevik Grødem & Ole Beier Sørensen - 123-124 Book Review: How Did Employee Ownership Firms Weather the Last Two Recessions? Employee Ownership, Employment Stability, and Firm Survival: 1999–2011
by Stan De Spiegelaere
November 2017, Volume 23, Issue 4
- 379-380 Editorial
by Jens Lind & Vera Scepanovic - 381-382 Éditorial
by Jens Lind & Vera Scepanovic - 383-385 Editorial
by Jens Lind & Vera Scepanovic - 387-408 Workers’ EU political alignments during the Great Recession
by André Freire & LuÃs Cabrita & Mariana Carmo Duarte & Hugo Ferrinho Lopes - 409-424 Looking to the future
by Felix Hadwiger - 425-439 Weakening trade union power
by Eli Moen - 441-455 Trade union renewal through local partnerships for skill formation
by Mads Peter Klindt - 457-473 The future of collective bargaining in Italy between legislative reforms and social partners’ responses
by Giuseppe Antonio Recchia - 475-493 The enforcement of diverse labour standards through private governance
by Judith Christina Stroehle - 495-497 Book Review: The New Social Division: Making and Unmaking Precariousness, Palgrave Studies in European Political Sociology
by Mirela Ivanova - 497-499 Book Review: Europe Entrapped
by Christophe Degryse - 499-502 Book Review: Berufs- und Spartengewerkschaften – Neue Akteure und Perspektiven der Tarifpolitik
by Otto Jacobi - 503-507 Debating the future of work
by Hermes Augusto Costa
August 2017, Volume 23, Issue 3
- 249-252 The digital economy and its implications for labour. 2. The consequences of digitalisation for the labour market
by Maria Jepsen & Jan Drahokoupil - 253-257 L’économie digitale et ses implications pour le travail. 2. Les conséquences de la digitalisation pour le marché du travail
by Maria Jepsen & Jan Drahokoupil - 258-262 Die digitale Wirtschaft und ihre Auswirkungen auf den Arbeitsmarkt. 2. Die Konsequenzen der Digitalisierung für den Arbeitsmarkt
by Maria Jepsen & Jan Drahokoupil - 263-279 A routine transition in the digital era? The rise of routine work in Central and Eastern Europe
by Roma Keister & Piotr Lewandowski - 281-294 The consumption dilemma of digital capitalism
by Philipp Staab - 295-311 A free lunch with robots – can a basic income stabilise the digital economy?
by Ville-Veikko Pulkka - 313-332 Gender inequalities in the new world of work
by Agnieszka Piasna & Jan Drahokoupil - 333-348 The digitalisation of service work – social partner responses in Denmark, Sweden and Germany
by Anna Ilsøe - 349-352 A Nordic approach to regulating intermediary online labour platforms
by Fredrik Söderqvist - 353-357 The mobilisation of gig economy couriers in Italy
by Arianna Tassinari & Vincenzo Maccarrone - 359-365 Reinventing the world of work
by Sandrino Graceffa & Sarah de Heusch - 367-369 Self-employment
by Richard Lomax - 371-373 Joint Review of: The corruption of capitalism and How will capitalism end
by David Hollanders - 373-375 Book Review: Public Service Management and Employment Relations in Europe. Emerging from the Crisis
by Werner Schmidt and Andrea Müller
May 2017, Volume 23, Issue 2
- 103-107 The digital economy and its implications for labour. 1. The platform economy
by Jan Drahokoupil & Maria Jepsen - 108-113 L’économie digitale et ses implications pour le monde du travail. Problématique 1: l’économie de plate-forme
by Jan Drahokoupil & Maria Jepsen - 114-119 Die digitale Ökonomie und ihre Auswirkungen auf die Arbeitswelt. 1. Die Plattform-Ökonomie
by Jan Drahokoupil & Maria Jepsen - 121-134 Digitalisation, between disruption and evolution
by Gérard Valenduc & Patricia Vendramin - 135-162 Digital labour and development: impacts of global digital labour platforms and the gig economy on worker livelihoods
by Mark Graham & Isis Hjorth & Vili Lehdonvirta - 163-175 In search of an adequate European policy response to the platform economy
by Brian Fabo & Jovana Karanovic & Katerina Dukova - 177-192 Digital economy and the rise of open cooperativism: the case of the Enspiral Network
by Alex Pazaitis & Vasilis Kostakis & Michel Bauwens - 193-205 The ‘gig economy’: employee, self-employed or the need for a special employment regulation?
by Adrián TodolÃ-Signes - 207-223 Towards collective protections for crowdworkers
by Annamaria Donini & Michele Forlivesi & Anna Rota & Patrizia Tullini - 225-227 Janus and the trade union challenge of digital technology
by Thiébaut Weber - 229-231 Slave to the keyboard: the broken promises of the gig economy
by Kristy Milland - 233-236 Decent crowdwork – the fight for labour law in the digital age
by Aileen Körfer & Oliver Röthig - 237-239 Book Review: Framing Work: Unitary, Pluralist and Critical Perspectives in the Twenty-first Century
by Paul Edwards - 239-243 Regulation of the financial markets, monetary union and the end of paper money. Joint Review
by Otto Jacobi - 243-245 Rethinking Capitalism: Economics and Policy for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth
by Martin Myant
February 2017, Volume 23, Issue 1
- 3-4 Editorial
by Jeremy Waddington - 5-6 Éditorial
by Jeremy Waddington - 7-8 Editorial
by Jeremy Waddington - 9-29 Union renewal: what can we learn from three decades of research?
by Gregor Murray - 31-46 Organising as a strategy to reach precarious and marginalised workers. A review of debates on the role of the political dimension and the dilemmas of representation and solidarity
by Miguel MartÃnez Lucio & Stefania Marino & Heather Connolly - 47-61 Membership density and trade union power
by Colin Crouch - 63-66 Trade unions, digitalisation and the self-employed – inclusion or exclusion?
by Gunter Haake - 67-77 ‘The practice anticipates our reflections’ – radical unions in Poland
by Adam Mrozowicki & Małgorzata Maciejewska - 79-88 Solidaires, unitaires et démocratiques: social movement unionism and beyond?
by Andy Mathers - 89-94 Organising without knowing it? The curious case of para-organising-style campaigns in southern Europe and the case of trade union elections in Spain
by Miguel MartÃnez Lucio - 95-96 Book Review: Labour and Transnational Action in Times of Crisis
by Oscar Molina - 96-98 Book Review: Comparative Workplace Employment Relations: An Analysis of Practice in Britain and France
by Duncan Adam
November 2016, Volume 22, Issue 4
- 433-435 Editorial
by Roberto Pedersini - 436-439 Éditorial
by Roberto Pedersini - 440-443 Editorial
by Roberto Pedersini - 445-460 Coordinated wage setting and social partnership under EMU. A framework for analysis and results from Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands
by Ivan F Dumka - 461-474 Political exchange, crisis of representation and trade union strategies in a time of austerity
by SofÃa Pérez de Guzmán & Beltrán Roca & Iban Diaz-Parra - 475-490 Soft procedures for hard impacts
by Emmanuelle Perin & Evelyne Léonard - 491-504 When do European Works Councils become useful to employees? Lessons learned from the Alstom / Switzerland case
by Patrick Ziltener & Heinz Gabathuler - 505-519 Polish trade unions and social dumping debates
by Magdalena Bernaciak - 521-534 Interventionism as a union strategy? The strategies of the Norwegian Nurses Organisation in relation to temporary agency work
by Ann Cecilie Bergene & Cathrine Egeland - 535-537 Book Review: International & Comparative Employment Relations
by Jens Lind - 537-540 Book Review: Regulating Transnational Labour in Europe: The quandaries of multilevel governance
by Isabelle Schömann - 540-542 Book Review: Closed Frontiers. Why German multinationals don’t utilise the European Works Council Directive
by Stan De Spiegelaere
August 2016, Volume 22, Issue 3
- 273-273 Editorial
by Heiner Dribbusch & Kurt Vandaele - 274-274 ÉDitorial
by Heiner Dribbusch & Kurt Vandaele - 275-275 Editorial
by Heiner Dribbusch & Kurt Vandaele - 277-294 Interpreting strike activity in western Europe in the past 20 years: the labour repertoire under pressure
by Kurt Vandaele - 295-313 Participants in trade union-staged demonstrations: a cross-country comparison
by Massimiliano Andretta & Lorenzo Bosi & Donatella della Porta - 315-329 The use of new ICTs in trade union protests – five European cases
by Raquel Rego & Wim Sprenger & Vassil Kirov & Greg Thomson & Daniele Di Nunzio - 331-345 Gendered division of trade union protests? Strategies, activities and outcomes of union activity among miners and nurses in Poland
by Julia Kubisa - 347-365 Organizing through conflict: exploring the relationship between strikes and union membership in Germany
by Heiner Dribbusch - 367-382 Strikes in the public sector in Denmark – assessing the economic gains and losses of collective action
by Steen Scheuer & Flemming Ibsen & Laust Høgedahl - 383-399 Trade union strategies to enhance strike effectiveness in Italy and Spain
by Oscar Molina & Oriol Barranco - 401-404 The ILO’s Employers’ Group and the right to strike
by Claire La Hovary - 405-411 The right to collective action (including strike) from the perspective of the European Social Charter of the Council of Europe
by Stefan Clauwaert - 413-418 Comparing official strike data in Europe – dealing with varieties of strike recording
by Heiner Dribbusch & Kurt Vandaele - 419-423 The renaissance of strikes in Switzerland
by Andreas Rieger - 425-427 Book Review: The right to strike. A comparative overview
by Filip Dorssemont - 427-429 Book Review: The Evolution of Intermediary Institutions in Europe. From Corporatism to Governance
by Anne Guisset
May 2016, Volume 22, Issue 2
- 143-144 Editorial
by Bettina Wagner & Anke Hassel - 145-146 ÉDitorial
by Bettina Wagner & Anke Hassel - 147-148 Editorial
by Bettina Wagner & Anke Hassel - 149-162 Economic freedoms and labour standards in the European Union
by Jan Cremers - 163-178 Posting, subcontracting and low-wage employment in the German meat industry
by Bettina Wagner & Anke Hassel - 179-192 Temporary agency work, migration and the crisis in Greece: labour market segmentation intensified
by Thanos Maroukis - 193-206 Restricted rights: obstacles in enforcing the labour rights of mobile EU workers in the German and Dutch construction sector
by Ines Wagner & Lisa Berntsen - 207-218 Poland in the migration chain: causes and consequences
by Michał Polakowski & Dorota Szelewa - 219-231 From labour migration to labour mobility? The return of the multinational worker in Europe
by Rutvica Andrijasevic & Devi Sacchetto - 249-253 Interview with Luca Visentini, ETUC General Secretary, 3 February 2016
by N/A - 255-257 Book Review: New Labour Policy, Industrial Relations and Trade Unions
by Edmund Heery - 257-260 Book Review: Deconstructing Flexicurity and Developing Alternative Approaches: Towards New Concepts and Approaches for Employment and Social Policy
by Luigi Burroni - 260-263 Book Review: Labour Markets, Institutions and Inequality – Building Just Societies in the 21st Century
by Hedva Sarfati - 265-269 Conference report on the Workshop ‘Socio-Economic Governance in the EU since the Crisis: The European Semester in Theory and Practice’
by Nina Büttgen
February 2016, Volume 22, Issue 1
- 3-5 Editorial
by Jens Lind - 5-7 Éditorial
by Jens Lind - 7-10 Editorial
by Jens Lind - 11-24 The very idea of democracy at work
by Richard Hyman - 25-44 Citizenship at work. A guiding principle for social and trade union policy
by Ulrich Mückenberger