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Azerbaijan exploits vacuum on Nagorno-KarabakhPolitics

Azerbaijan exploits vacuum on Nagorno-Karabakh

George Meneshian

The European Union must urgently intervene in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh or lose the region to a proxy war.

Abuse at work: who bears the brunt?Economy

Abuse at work: who bears the brunt?

Agnès Parent-Thirion and Viginta Ivaskaite-Tamosiune

When it comes to violence in the workplace, women and frontline workers are disproportionately the victims.

Ukraine’s cause: momentum is diminishingPolitics

Ukraine’s cause: momentum is diminishing

Stefan Wolff and Tetyana Malyarenko

In the Ukraine war, mixed signals among Kyiv’s allies in Europe and the United States hint at growing conflict fatigue.

Vienna social-housing model: celebrated but misusedSociety

Vienna social-housing model: celebrated but misused

Gabu Heindl

The ‘Vienna model’ has been distorted to embrace private investment but its real redefinition should be ecological.

Social democracy versus the nativist rightPolitics

Social democracy versus the nativist right

Jan Zielonka

If progressives are to defeat the populists, Jan Zielonka writes, they must offer a vision beyond the nation-state.

Which comes first—Big Toxics’ profits or health?Ecology

Which comes first—Big Toxics’ profits or health?

Vicky Cann

Stricter European Union regulation of toxic chemicals is being jeopardised by corporate lobbying.

Ukraine: journalists in Russia’s sightsPolitics

Ukraine: journalists in Russia’s sights

Kelly Bjorkland and Simon Smith

Reports suggest that Russia has been deliberately targeting journalists in Ukraine—which is a war crime.

EU enlargement—back to the futurePolitics

EU enlargement—back to the future

Emilija Tudzarovska

How the European Union failed to deal with the collapse of Yugoslavia has lessons for the imperative of enlargement today.

Fostering public research or boosting Big Tech?Society

Fostering public research or boosting Big Tech?

Philip Freeman and Jan Willem Goudriaan

The European Health Data Space should serve patients and healthcare workers, not private profit.

Non-EU migrant workers—the ties that bindEconomy

Non-EU migrant workers—the ties that bind

Lilana Keith

The European Union stands at a fork in the road when it comes to its treatment of external migrant workers.

How the ECB’s ‘deposit facility’ subsidises banksEconomy

How the ECB’s ‘deposit facility’ subsidises banks

David Hollanders

Banks profit from the European Central Bank´s interest-rate policy at the expense of taxpayers.

Foundation for European Progressive Studies Advertisement

The summer issue of the Progressive Post magazine by FEPS is out!

The Special Coverage of this new edition is dedicated to the importance of biodiversity, not only as a good in itself but also for the very existence of humankind. We need a paradigm change in the mostly utilitarian relation humans have with nature.

In this issue, we also look at the hazards of unregulated artificial intelligence, explore the shortcomings of the EU's approach to migration and asylum management, and analyse the social downside of the EU's current ethnically-focused Roma policy.


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Hans Böckler Stiftung Advertisement

WSI European Collective Bargaining Report 2022 / 2023

With real wages falling by 4 per cent in 2022, workers in the European Union suffered an unprecedented loss in purchasing power. The reason for this was the rapid increase in consumer prices, behind which nominal wage growth fell significantly. Meanwhile, inflation is no longer driven by energy import prices, but by domestic factors. The increased profit margins of companies are a major reason for persistent inflation. In this difficult environment, trade unions are faced with the challenge of securing real wages—and companies have the responsibility of making their contribution to returning to the path of political stability by reducing excess profits.


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The future of remote work

The 12 chapters collected in this volume provide a multidisciplinary perspective on the impact and the future trajectories of remote work, from the nexus between the location from where work is performed and how it is performed to how remote locations may affect the way work is managed and organised, as well as the applicability of existing legislation. Additional questions concern remote work’s environmental and social impact and the rapidly changing nature of the relationship between work and life.


AVAILABLE HERE

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Eurofound Talks: does Europe have the skills it needs for a changing economy?

In this episode of the Eurofound Talks podcast, Mary McCaughey speaks with Eurofound’s research manager, Tina Weber, its senior research manager, Gijs van Houten, and Giovanni Russo, senior expert at CEDEFOP (The European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training), about Europe’s skills challenges and what can be done to help workers and businesses adapt to future skills demands.

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