This article examines the impact of work-time regulation, introduced by the UK’s New Labour governments (1997–2010). In doing so, we return to Marx’s hypotheses regarding the length of the working day. These include the arguments that class conflict over the length of the working day is inherently distributional in a surplus-value sense and that workers often display a preference for reduced hours even with a proportionate reduction in pay. Our quantitative Marxist methodology provides a way of assessing the pattern of surplus value before and during the period of office of the New Labour governments and the distributional effects of regulation. The impact of such regulations on workers’ preferences are examined through an investigation of ...
Several disciplines can inform drivers of national regulatory models of working time. The analysis o...
This thesis analyses the impact on productivity, employment, overtime, earnings and costs of shorter...
The paper re-analyses the evidence presented by pro and anti-regulation interests during the debates...
This article examines the impact of work-time regulation, introduced by the UK’s New Labour governme...
It is now over a year since the Working Time Regulations entered force in Britain on 1 October 1998,...
New forms of temporal contestation are taking place in the world of work. UK employers are requiring...
This paper explores new working time arrangements around a critique of the ‘commodification of time’...
This article is concerned with exploring how working time is regulated and experienced in the intern...
The organization of working time is a central concern in today's labour market, as it is connected t...
This article explores the erosion of the standard working-time model associated with ...
Given the underdeveloped attention to political and policy origins of aggregate work time patterns i...
This article opens by suggesting that the decline in the sociology of work in the UK has been overst...
In recent years, in some European countries where unemployment has been stubbornly high, interest ha...
This paper uses the first twelve waves of the British Household Panel Survey covering the period 199...
We demonstrate that social movements can use accounting for progressive purposes, and that such outc...
Several disciplines can inform drivers of national regulatory models of working time. The analysis o...
This thesis analyses the impact on productivity, employment, overtime, earnings and costs of shorter...
The paper re-analyses the evidence presented by pro and anti-regulation interests during the debates...
This article examines the impact of work-time regulation, introduced by the UK’s New Labour governme...
It is now over a year since the Working Time Regulations entered force in Britain on 1 October 1998,...
New forms of temporal contestation are taking place in the world of work. UK employers are requiring...
This paper explores new working time arrangements around a critique of the ‘commodification of time’...
This article is concerned with exploring how working time is regulated and experienced in the intern...
The organization of working time is a central concern in today's labour market, as it is connected t...
This article explores the erosion of the standard working-time model associated with ...
Given the underdeveloped attention to political and policy origins of aggregate work time patterns i...
This article opens by suggesting that the decline in the sociology of work in the UK has been overst...
In recent years, in some European countries where unemployment has been stubbornly high, interest ha...
This paper uses the first twelve waves of the British Household Panel Survey covering the period 199...
We demonstrate that social movements can use accounting for progressive purposes, and that such outc...
Several disciplines can inform drivers of national regulatory models of working time. The analysis o...
This thesis analyses the impact on productivity, employment, overtime, earnings and costs of shorter...
The paper re-analyses the evidence presented by pro and anti-regulation interests during the debates...