Social policy starts at home
By designing a policy package around the needs of contemporary families, political leaders can promote women’s rights, children’s development and employment.
By designing a policy package around the needs of contemporary families, political leaders can promote women’s rights, children’s development and employment.
Deliveroo ‘riders’ are workers and not self-employed, according to Spanish courts.
Most discussion of inequality in Europe is confined to individual member states. Aggregating incomes across the EU, however, presents a sobering picture.
Karin Pettersson argues that progressive politics is floundering in the waves generated by Big Data—when it could be shaping the tide.
Proroguing Westminster is a transparent manoeuvre by Boris Johnson to set up a ‘people versus Parliament’ election, even with the UK on course to crash out of the EU.
To focus on online platforms in isolation would miss the point that they are part of a wider phenomenon of spreading and intensifying precarity at work.
In our ‘Europe2025’ series, Kirsty Hughes argues that a Green New Deal can gel the domestic and neighbourhood policies of the union.
Branko Milanovic argues that, after all the struggles to universalise the franchise, one-person one-vote is not the summit of democracy at all.
The welfare state in Europe must become a social-investment state if the broken European social contract is to be renewed.
In our ‘Europe2025’ series, Mary Kaldor argues that developing substantive democracy in Europe to tame neoliberal globalisation must be the Leitmotif for the coming European term.
As the workforce is feminised and women come to predominate among union members, the next step is assuming leadership roles in the trade-union movement.
In the latest contribution to our ‘Europe2025’ series, Sophie Pornschlegel argues the EU needs to rethink its mode of action, in addition to tackling the pressing policy challenges ahead.
The Labour Party has squandered three years in addressing the challenge posed by the Brexit referendum.
If authoritarian populism is rooted in economics, then the appropriate remedy is a populism of another kind—targeting economic injustice and inclusion—but pluralist in its politics and not necessarily damaging to democracy.
Europe must get beyond seeing the head of the IMF as part of the spoils from Bretton Woods.
Worsening economic inequality in recent years is largely the result of policy choices that reflect the political influence and lobbying power of the rich.
Europe needs a new eco-social paradigm if it is to ward off the populist sirens and offer a positive vision for the continent.