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As our digital economy continues to expand, gig work becomes
increasingly significant. This incisive book investigates the ways
in which social dialogue can reinforce decent working practices and
create inclusive workplaces in the growing gig economy, putting
forward a framework for structured dialogue and collective
bargaining among social partners, platforms, and workers. Centred
on four major case studies - Germany, Greece, Switzerland, and the
UK - the book analyses the key challenges that characterise the
varied European landscape of gig economies and workforces. With a
particular focus on the hospitality, driving, and food delivery
sectors, chapters explore the intersection of social partners'
responses and gig workers' capacity to organise and build
collective voice. Examining the complicated and overlapping
linkages between workers' rights, social protection, social
dialogue, and decent work, the book aims to expose, and ultimately
put an end to, precariousness and exploitation in the context of
gig labour. Integrating critical theoretical perspectives and
methodologies with context-sensitive evidence, this book will be an
essential resource for students and scholars of sociology, social
policy, labour policy, employment relations, and human resource
management. Its examination of timely questions of collective
action and social dialogue in the gig economy will also appeal to
activists, journalists, social partners, and policymakers.
EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. The
motivations of migrants for travelling to Europe vary, and the
quality of the processes involved in their settlement and
contribution to social and economic development are inextricably
linked to their prospects of finding and sustaining good-quality
work. This book explores the labour market integration of migrants,
refugees and asylum seekers across seven European countries: the
Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Italy, Switzerland and
the UK. Using empirical data from the Horizon2020 SIRIUS Project,
it investigates how legal, political, social and personal
circumstances combine to determine the work trajectory for migrants
who choose Europe as their home.
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