Enhancing the political participation of women from under-represented groups
The author of a report to the Council of Europe elaborates how representation gaps can be closed so politics is refreshed and reflects wider society.
The author of a report to the Council of Europe elaborates how representation gaps can be closed so politics is refreshed and reflects wider society.
In theory, the Biden administration and the EU can collaborate to end multinational tax abuse. In practice, it’s not that simple.
If the pitfalls of the last attempted transatlantic trade deal are avoided, this could be a vehicle for improving standards.
Europe’s trade union and Christian business leaders appeal jointly for a new economic and social order after the pandemic.
Can the Conference on the Future of Europe be a turning point from a mere economic union to one of social rights?
A vibrant civil society is essential to the foundations of democracy—a lesson especially important when those seem under siege.
Big Pharma has not been the real innovator in the fight against the pandemic and intellectual property rights must be reshaped to restore fairness.
Branko Milanovic sets out an agenda for global progressives in the 21st century.
The centrality of market mechanisms to the European Commission’s climate package poses big questions as to its effectiveness and distributional impact.
Implicit in the global ‘race to the bottom’ on corporation tax in recent decades has been that this favours growth. Yet does it?
It’s a lot easier to ignore the plight of the refugees at Europe’s borders if one doesn’t hear their stories.
Last week the European Parliament endorsed a report by the author on enhancing civic participation in the deliberations of the union.
Convergence of central and eastern-European EU members towards older ones with high minimum wages is much stronger than in the Mediterranean countries.
Several negative effects need to be addressed in the current negotiations on the directive, in the Swedish trade union view.
The ECB's strategy review, Adam Tooze writes, says more by its silences than its statements.
There has been a macroeconomic blindspot in feminist narratives of the pandemic which unwittingly limits the scope of critique.
Recognition of the EU’s gravitational pull on ‘global Britain’—and so any rapprochement—will take many years.