How much work is enough?
Three years of pandemic-related disruptions could herald the most significant labour-market transformation since the dawn of industry.
politics, economy and employment & labour
Anne-Marie Slaughter and Autumn McDonald
Three years of pandemic-related disruptions could herald the most significant labour-market transformation since the dawn of industry.
Estrella Durá Ferrandis and Alba Huertas Ruiz
As the Porto Social Forum convenes, two years on from the Social Summit there, it’s time to upgrade the EU social agenda.
European same-sex couples have a right to civil unions, Romania and Russia have recently discovered.
Autonomy and intrinsic motivation spur productivity and creativity in workplaces where time is flexible and relationships good.
The xenophobia from the social-democratic leader since his first-round defeat is unlikely to win him the second.
Providing affordable housing is not only doing the right thing. There is an economic spinoff for everyone.
Without a global awareness, Europe’s transition to ‘net zero’ will be a zero-sum game.
‘National Conservatism’, Paul Mason writes, fails to chime with British national-popular culture.
The days when Europe’s welfare states could be represented as a ‘burden’ are over. Actually, they are a boon.
Nabanita Datta Gupta and Jonas Jessen
New research examines which of these two approaches produces the best outcomes for children.
On International Day Against Homophobia, official Russia now demarcates itself very firmly on the other global side.
Russia’s invasion has affected women in many ways, from pregnancy care to sexual violence as a weapon of war.
Social Europe ISSN 2628-7641