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While the debate on the impact of globalisation on the organisation
of business is well established, its impact on working life has
been left relatively untouched. This groundbreaking book attempts
to redress this imbalance by examining the effect of globalisation
on the institutions, processes and practices of working life in
France, Scandinavia and the UK. The contributors examine global
trends such as the decentralisation of industrial relations and the
revival of neo-liberalism, and discuss them from a theoretical and
empirical perspective. They go on to argue that these global trends
can really only exist in nationally specific contexts and focus on
the changing roles of trade union and labour movements in
representing workers' interests. They trace the emergence of new
European institutional and political dimensions of working, and
attempt to answer the question of how converged, diverged or
revised European working practices have become. The book
concentrates on various aspects of working life to illustrate the
variety of change and complexity and asserts the view that it is
not possible to isolate abstract global trends from national,
historical and social factors. Indeed, certain phenomena such as
politics, gender and culture play an important role, the authors
argue, in differentiating national experiences which can
superficially appear to be similar global trends. European Working
Lives will be of great interest to labour and social economists,
industrial sociologists, employment policymakers and trade unions.
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