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Adopting far-right rhetoric increases far-right votesPolitics

Adopting far-right rhetoric increases far-right votes

Antonia May and Christian Czymara

Mainstream parties attempting to regain support from radical-right populists can unintentionally benefit them.

Crime and security in far-right discoursePolitics

Crime and security in far-right discourse

Claire Hamilton

Protests in Ireland against the housing of single male asylum-seekers highlight the role played by security in far-right discourse.

Ukraine: a bitter armistice or war until victory?Politics

Ukraine: a bitter armistice or war until victory?

Frank Hoffer

After two years of war, victory eludes Ukraine yet must be denied Russia—a frozen conflict is the least bad scenario.

Ukraine war: the west is at a crossroadsPolitics

Ukraine war: the west is at a crossroads

Stefan Wolff

It must double down on aid to Kyiv, accept a compromise deal or face humiliation by Russia.

#FairFarma: an open call for a fair policy on drugsSociety

#FairFarma: an open call for a fair policy on drugs

Jan Willem Goudriaan, Claude Rolin and Jean-Pascal Labille

Belgian civil-society organisations issue a call to the presidency of the Council of the EU.

Getting to net zero: Europe’s investment challengeEcology

Getting to net zero: Europe’s investment challenge

Guillaume Kerlero de Rosbo and Nicolas Desquinabo

Europe must invest heavily in its decarbonisation. Yet the expenditures are manageable, the alternatives unconscionable.

Farmers’ protests: against whom the horn honks?Society

Farmers’ protests: against whom the horn honks?

Kristjan Bragason and Ludovic Voet

The fragility of our food system and lack of social acceptance of EU policies must be addressed in the next mandate.

Germany: an elegy for principled humanitarianismPolitics

Germany: an elegy for principled humanitarianism

Lys Kulamadayil

Funding for the UN Relief and Works Agency in Gaza has fallen victim to other than humanitarian considerations.

EU legislation on health data a gift to Big TechSociety

EU legislation on health data a gift to Big Tech

Irene Schipper, David Ollivier de Leth and Jan Willem Goudriaan

The European Health Data Space under negotiations will turn citizens’ medical data into profits for US technology corporations.

What works for the left? Liberal socialismPolitics

What works for the left? Liberal socialism

Bo Rothstein

As the European Parliament elections loom, with the populists rising, progressives need a liberal-left narrative.

‘Building back better’: a promise fulfilled?Economy

‘Building back better’: a promise fulfilled?

Lydia Korinek and Lukas Bertram

Three years on, the lesson of the EU’s post-pandemic recovery fund is that building economic resilience is a long-term endeavour.

International sport: the rules of the gameSociety

International sport: the rules of the game

Ankita Anand

Power imbalances in international sport, Ankita Anand writes, reflect the global north-south disparity.

The farmers’ protests, the far right and the falloutEcology

The farmers’ protests, the far right and the fallout

Isabel Schatzschneider

The EU must stop giving ground on its climate vows—unless it wants to help the far right ride to victory.

European Works Councils: on a road to further reformEconomy

European Works Councils: on a road to further reform

Paul Dillon

The latest proposals from the European Commission could put European Works Councils on a firmer footing.

Ukraine war: Zelenskyy’s very risky movePolitics

Ukraine war: Zelenskyy’s very risky move

Stefan Wolff and Tetyana Malyarenko

Kyiv needs a fundamental rethink of its strategy, not just a reshuffle of the military leadership.

Amazon: call to ban its lobbyists backedSociety

Amazon: call to ban its lobbyists backed

Bram Vranken, Oliver Roethig, Margarida Silva and Max Bank

Support is mobilised behind the demand by MEPs that Amazon’s lobbyists be barred from the European Parliament.

Strike wave in Finland—a legacy of trust in transition?Society

Strike wave in Finland—a legacy of trust in transition?

Ulla Liukkunen

A wave of strikes has followed moves by the government in Helsinki to interfere with workers’ rights.

Hans Böckler Stiftung Advertisement

Comparing living and working conditions: Germany out-performs the United States

This paper compares living and working conditions in the US and Germany for the year 2022 with a focus on economic, social and environmental standards. Emphasis is also placed on income and wealth inequality.

Twelve dimensions of comparison are used, split into 15 themes, examined with 80 indicators. Germany comes out ahead on 10 of the themes. When the relative sizes of the gaps are also taken into account, Germany gets an overall score of 23 and the US only 6.

This paper is, to the knowledge of the author, the only comprehensive comparison of living conditions in the US and Germany. The framing of the comparison is the analysis of two different types of capitalism. It underlines the limited role of per capita gross domestic product in the living conditions of the majority of the population while highlighting the impact of institutions and the type of welfare state.


DOWNLOAD HERE

ETUI advertisement

Discover the new volume of Trade Unions in the European Union

In the context of a revival of union power in the US and the coming European elections, the ETUI is releasing Trade Unions in the European Union, analysing the first two decades of the 21st century when trade unions have been repeatedly challenged by neoliberal programmes. Published by Peter Lang and edited by three ETUI experts (J Waddington, T Müller and K Vandaele) with the support of 45 contributors, this milestone publication is the most comprehensive comparative overview of the development, structures and policies of national trade unions in the EU since 2000.


AVAILABLE HERE

Eurofound advertisement

Minimum wages 2024: the tide is turning

While the prospects for minimum wage workers in early 2023 looked gloomy—with rates in many European Union member states struggling to offset rising prices—2024 brings better news. National minimum wages have been raised significantly in most countries, in both nominal and real terms, and also when examined in the context of the entire period since 2022, when inflation rates started to surge.

Read Eurofound's analysis of 2024 minimum-wage developments in Europe.


READ HERE

Foundation for European Progressive Studies Advertisement

The Progressive Yearbook, now available!

With its fifth edition, the Progressive Yearbook can be considered an established and thriving tradition, through which FEPS wishes to reflect on the most important developments of the previous year and to try to imagine what the future has in store for 2024.

With this new volume, we prepare ourselves for a transformative year marked by pivotal elections. We cast a spotlight on the 2024 European Parliament elections and extend our attention to the broader political landscape. Reform of the EU treaties, enlargement, the twin transition and international developments are some of the topics of this year’s edition.

The book also includes an interview with the recipient of the FEPS Progressive Person of the Year award: Teresa Ribera.


DOWNLOAD HERE

Friedrich Ebert Stiftung advertisement

It‘s all about jobs: investing in Europe’s workers and qualifications for a competitive clean economy

An ecological miracle on the labour market? Or rather job losses? The impact on employment and job profiles in Europe of ecological modernisation is a question driving politics and society.

We have taken a close look at studies and forecasts on the development of the European labour market. One thing is clear: without qualified and motivated workers, the economy will not flourish and the modernisation process will come to a standstill. Europe must deliver on a massive scale in the coming years to remain at the forefront.

We spoke to trade unionists and experts: what trends do we need to shape, what risks do we need to avoid, what course do we need to set now? Key findings in this study from FES Just Climate.


DOWNLOAD HERE

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