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Far-Right wins in Austria and Germany: what mainstream parties keep getting wrong Politics

Far-Right wins in Austria and Germany: what mainstream parties keep getting wrong

Cas Mudde and Gabriela Greilinger

Recent far-right victories in Europe reveal the dangerous effects of mainstreaming extremist views and the urgent need for a new political strategy.

The EU’s ‘People, Skills, Preparedness’ agenda: A risky shift in social policy Politics

The EU’s ‘People, Skills, Preparedness’ agenda: A risky shift in social policy

Amandine Crespy and Bastian Kenn

The EU’s ‘People, Skills, Preparedness’ shift signals a move toward individual responsibility and crisis management in social policy.

Rust Belt battle: Harris fights to stop Trump and save democracy Politics

Rust Belt battle: Harris fights to stop Trump and save democracy

Harold Meyerson

With the Rust Belt up for grabs, Kamala Harris faces a last-minute fight to stop Trump and protect the future of American democracy.

Amazon’s office mandate: The hidden power play behind workplace control Economy

Amazon’s office mandate: The hidden power play behind workplace control

Nicola Countouris and Valerio De Stefano

Amazon’s office mandate exposes workplace power dynamics and the need to rethink employer control.

Putin’s dangerous power play: How a century-old Russian strategy threatens the west Politics

Putin’s dangerous power play: How a century-old Russian strategy threatens the west

Nina L Khrushcheva

How Putin’s Quest for Power Revives Russia’s Century-Old Threat to the West.

Why the Draghi Report on EU markets matters Economy

Why the Draghi Report on EU markets matters

Howard Davies

Can Europe overcome its capital market flaws and catch up to the US? The Draghi Report sounds a critical alarm for the EU’s future.

Far-Right surge in Austria: Is Europe headed for an authoritarian wave? Politics

Far-Right surge in Austria: Is Europe headed for an authoritarian wave?

Robert Misik

Austria’s far-right Freedom Party (FPÖ) has surged to dominance in national elections, with major implications for democracy and political stability.

Making Europe weak again Politics

Making Europe weak again

Joschka Fischer

As the US election looms, Europe’s far-right surge threatens its democratic stability and unity amid rising global challenges.

How Trump’s energy policies could set America back decades Ecology

How Trump’s energy policies could set America back decades

Joseph Stiglitz

Just as Donald Trump’s overall economic strategy is based on nostalgia for a bygone era, his fossil-fuel-centered energy policies would represent a quixotic attempt to reverse history.

Inequalities unmasked: disparities across the EU Society

Inequalities unmasked: disparities across the EU

Mary McCaughey

What should Europe do about inequality? The start is to recognise some of its citizens are more equal than others.

Enhancing gender equality to counter the backlash Politics

Enhancing gender equality to counter the backlash

Lina Gálvez Muñoz

The new chair of the European Parliament’s FEMM committee sets an agenda on gender for this five-year term.

The ‘union of equality’ requires leadership Politics

The ‘union of equality’ requires leadership

Agnès Hubert

If gender equality is not to fall down the European Commission’s priorities, its president must take the lead.

The canker among Europe’s roses Society

The canker among Europe’s roses

Ankita Anand

Europe’s love for flowers, Ankita Anand writes, ignores their often tainted roots.

Draghi on ‘competitiveness’: new wine in an old bottle Economy

Draghi on ‘competitiveness’: new wine in an old bottle

Werner Raza, Michael Ertl and Michael Soder

The Draghi report contains some useful proposals but fails to match up to the challenges the European Union is facing.

Renewables and agriculture—friends, not foes Ecology

Renewables and agriculture—friends, not foes

Hannah O'Sullivan and Cosimo Tansini

There is enough land in Europe for wholly renewable energy without compromising nature protection or food production.

The case for a global climate assembly Ecology

The case for a global climate assembly

Laurence Tubiana and Ana Toni

Only a minority of respondents in recent surveys trust their governments to achieve a just transition.

‘Better regulation’? Capital first, society second Politics

‘Better regulation’? Capital first, society second

Brigitte Pircher

EU policies on better law-making are tipping the scales in favour of businesses, marginalising social and environmental concerns.

Hans Böckler Stiftung Advertisement

WSI European Collective Bargaining Report 2023/2024

Real wages in the European Union continued their decline in 2023—despite an acceleration in nominal wage growth and falling inflation rates. For the current year, there are tentative signs only of a slow recovery of the purchasing power of wages. A resumption of real wage growth would stabilise the functional distribution of income and strengthen domestic demand. However, even under this benign scenario, the crisis is not over from workers' point of view: they have borne the brunt of the real income losses associated with the energy-price shock resulting from the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The lingering reduction in real wage levels means that wage policy still needs to catch up to contribute to a fairer distribution of the burden between labour and capital.


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Bertelsmann Stiftung advertisement

Quo vadis, Cohesion Policy? European Regional Development at a Crossroads

European Union Cohesion Policy is on the back foot. In a time of war, trade rivalry, climate change and digital transition, with a raft of new policy priorities and yet tightening fiscal room for manoeuvre, a fundamental discussion on its relevance and direction is under way. Europe’s structural policy to improve economic, social and territorial conditions with long-term planning horizons seems barely to have a place in a world where policy-makers feel the need to react to crises swiftly.

Yet Cohesion Policy is relevant to most of the crises and problems Europe faces by focusing on preventive measures, providing a framework to guide action now, instead of waiting for the next crisis to erupt. So why is the EU’s longest serving investment instrument under so much pressure to justify its existence? This new policy paper from the Bertelsmann Stiftung gives an overview of the debate and the various trade-offs of potential reforms.


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ETUI advertisement

Artificial intelligence, labour and society

The rapid expansion of artificial intelligence is unparalleled, establishing it as a ubiquitous element in workplaces and our daily lives. The era when AI was exclusively associated with robots and intricate algorithms for the technically proficient is over. This marks a significant paradigm shift, with profound implications and changes regarding the world we live in. This book proposes an analysis of this transformation, and does so by bringing together the reflections of more than 20 high-level academics and research activists from across the world.


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Eurofound advertisement

Becoming adults: Young people in a post-pandemic world

Eurofound's new report, Becoming adults: Young people in a post-pandemic world, explores young people’s wishes and plans for the future—and the wellbeing outcomes related to these plans—in the context of the current labour market and housing situation and progress on the implementation of the European Union’s reinforced Youth Guarantee. It finds that, while there are positive signs for young people in terms of employment, many young people in Europe find themselves locked out of the housing market and unable to establish the independence required to have families of their own.


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Foundation for European Progressive Studies Advertisement

Join the event ‘Computer in Command’ on the consequences of algorithmic management for workers!

On October 16th, join us online or physically at the European Economic and Social Committee for an engaging debate on the impact of artificial intelligence at work, organised by FEPS and the EESC. The renowned speakers will include Nicolas Schmit, outgoing European commissioner for jobs and social rights; Brando Benefei, Socialists and Democrats MEP; Lucie Studničná, president of the EESC Workers’ Group, and Isabelle Schömann, deputy general secretary of the European Trade Union Confederation.

We shall present key findings from the research ‘Computer in Command’, based on a survey of over 6,000 union members in Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Finland. We shall also examine EU legal provisions on AI in the workplace, identifying critical areas that require a reassessment of its application, the potential actions trade unions can take and necessary legislative interventions.


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