A future-fit recovery?
EU member states’ National Recovery and Resilience Plans have been assessed against their capacity for transformative change—and found wanting.
EU member states’ National Recovery and Resilience Plans have been assessed against their capacity for transformative change—and found wanting.
The huge toll of Covid-19 on mental health highlights the need for public investment to tackle the vast reservoir of distress.
In the standoff between the federal government and the European Commission on wage protection, the former has right on its side.
'Intersectionality’ can help frame the complexity of progressive politics in the context of a new transatlantic partnership.
After privatisation and austerity, long-term care needs to be restored to resilience and readiness for an ageing population.
The pandemic has accelerated teleworking in the public sector—but with inadequate planning have come mixed results.
A by-election in northern England highlights the corrosive atrophying of the UK body politic, Paul Mason writes.
Workers have stood on the frontline of the pandemic, but the ITUC Global Rights Index documents an anti-worker agenda.
Who represents the EU internationally? ‘Sofagate’ reignited the issue and the Conference on the Future of Europe should aim to sort it.
As of today, the Istanbul convention ceases to be effective in Turkey. But that’s not the end of the story.
The Conference on the Future of Europe might sow the seeds of a genuine European political space.
Using the rainbow flag to symbolise an east-west divide in Europe risks playing into the hands of authoritarian leaders.
The EU needs to acknowledge the vital economic role of posting and differentiate the rules according to its different types.
Kate Pickett argues the pandemic has not only massively affected public health but compounded the unhealthy effects of years of job insecurity.
Last week the Spanish premier, Pedro Sánchez, pardoned the nine Catalan political prisoners—to very mixed reactions.
The platform economy has intensified power imbalances between companies and their workers, which only collective voice can redress.
As the ownership of firms becomes transferred to algorithmically-controlled index funds, why not put their human employees in charge instead?